The Jerusalem Post

Two ex-Nazi concentrat­ion camp guards charged in Germany

Wiesenthal Center locates 18 survivors of Stutthof to assist in trial

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

An indictment has been filed in Muenster, Germany, against two guards who worked at the Stutthof concentrat­ion camp near Gdansk, Poland.

The State Prosecutor’s Office in the western city of Dortmund said the two unnamed suspects, ages 92 and 93, participat­ed in murders committed by the Nazis, according to a statement released by the regional court in nearby Muenster.

“With their actions during their time as guards at the Stutthof concentrat­ion camp, the accused are believed to have been accessorie­s in numerous killings,” the statement said.

The 92-year-old suspect was stationed at Stutthof between June 1944 and May 1945, while the 93-year-old acted as a guard between June 1942 and September 1944.

The Muenster court said that both suspects have denied involvemen­t in the deaths at Stutthof.

In accordance with prosecutio­n policy adopted in Germany several years ago, any person who served in any capacity in deaths camps or in killing squads can be convicted on the basis of service alone, without having to prove they committed any specific crimes.

A statement issued by The Simon Wiesenthal Center’s chief Nazi-hunter, Dr. Efraim Zuroff, noted the importance of the final efforts to bring Holocaust perpetrato­rs to justice, and congratula­ted the German prosecutor­s on their efforts in the case.

“During the past four months, the Wiesenthal Center has located 18 survivors of Stutthof, most of whom currently live in Israel, to assist the preparatio­ns for the trial of the Stutthof guards,” Zuroff said. “Other survivors were located in the United States and Sweden. These survivors were primarily Jews from Lithuanian ghettos and Hungarian Jews who had initially been deported to Auschwitz. Approximat­ely 110,000 Jews and non-Jews were deported to Stutthof and about 85,000 were murdered there. In 1943, a gas chamber was built there to facilitate the last stages of the ‘Final Solution.’ We urge anyone with informatio­n regarding Stutthof survivors to contact us as soon as possible.” THE ENTRANCE to the Stutthof concentrat­ion camp once opened to some 85,000 Jews who were murdered there by the Nazis during the Holocaust.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel