Ex-SS guard on trial in push to punish Nazi crimes
DETMOLD, Germany — A 94 -yea r- old former SS guard at the Auschwitz death camp goes on trial this week on 170,0 00 counts of accessory to murder, the f irst of as many as four cases being brought to court this year in an 11th-hour push by German prosecutors to punish Nazi war crimes.
Reinhold Hanning is accused of serving as an SS Unterscharfuehrer — similar to a sergeant — in Auschwitz from January 1943 to June 1944, a time when hundreds of thousands of Hungarian Jews were brought to the camp in cattle cars and gassed to death.
The trial for the retiree from a town near the western city of Detmold starts today and is one of the latest that follow a precedent set in 2011, when former Ohio autoworker John Demjanjuk became the first person to be convicted in Germany solely for serving as a camp guard, with no evidence of involvement in a specific killing.
The verdict vastly widened the number of possible prosecutions, establishing that simply helping the camp to function was sufficient to make one an accessory to the murders committed there.
Before that, prosecutors needed to present evidence of a specific crime — a difficult task with few surviving witnesses and perpetrators whose names were rarely known and whose faces were often only seen briefly.
Hanning’s attorney, Jo- hannes Salmen, says his client acknowledges serving at the Auschwitz I part of the camp complex in Nazi-occupied Poland, but denies serving at the Auschwitz II-Birkenau section, where most of the 1.1 million victims were killed.
Prosecutor Andreas Brendel told The Associated Press, however, that guards in the main camp were also used as on-call guards to augment those in Birkenau when trainloads of Jews were brought in.
Leon Schwarzbaum, a 94 -yea r- old Auschwitz survivor from Berlin who is the first witness scheduled for the trial, said he can’t forget the vivid images he witnessed there.
“The chimneys were spewing fire ... and the smell of burning human flesh was so unbeliev-- able that one could hardly bear it,” he told reporters Wednesday.
More than punishment, Schwarzbaum said he hoped the trial would give the former SS man an opportunity to give a full accounting of what he saw and did.
“It’s perhaps the last time for him to tell the truth. He has to speak the truth,” Schwarzbaum said.