guardian.co.uk,
Associated Press in Berlin, Wednesday 5 October 2011
Germany has reopened investigations into Nazi death camp guards after the conviction of John Demjanjuk. Photograph: Lukas Barth/AFP/Getty Images |
Prosecutors
in Germany have reopened hundreds of investigations of former Nazi death camp
guards and others who might now be charged under a precedent set by the
conviction of John Demjanjuk, a guard at Sobibor camp in Poland in 1943.
Given the
advanced age of the suspects – the youngest is in his 80s – the head of the
German prosecutors' office dedicated to investigating Nazi war crimes said
authorities would not wait for the Demjanjuk appeal process to finish. "We
don't want to wait too long, so we've already begun our investigations,"
Kurt Schrimm said.
The Simon
Wiesenthal Centre's chief Nazi-hunter, Efraim Zuroff, said he would launch a
campaign in the next two months – a successor to his Operation Last Chance – to
track down the remaining war criminals.
He added
that the Demjanjuk conviction had opened the door to prosecutions that were
never thought possible. "It could be a very interesting final
chapter," he said by telephone from Jerusalem. "This has tremendous
implications, even at this late date."
Demjanjuk,
now 91, was deported from the US to Germany in 2009 to stand trial. He wasconvicted in May of 28,060 counts of accessory to murder for serving as a guardat the Sobibor death camp. It was the first time prosecutors were able to
convict someone in a Nazi-era case without direct evidence that the suspect
participated in a specific killing. He has appealed against his conviction.
In bringing
Demjanjuk to trial, Munich prosecutors argued that if they could prove he was a
guard at a camp like Sobibor, which had been established for the sole purpose
of extermination, it would be enough to convict him of being an accessory to
murder.
After 18
months of testimony a Munich court agreed and found Demjanjuk guilty,
sentencing him to five years in prison. Demjanjuk, a retired car worker who
denies having served as a guard, is currently free and living in southern
Germany as he waits for his appeal to be heard.
Schrimm
said his office was poring over its files to see if others fit into the same
category as Demjanjuk. He could not give an exact figure, but said there were
probably "less than 1,000" possible suspects living in Germany and
elsewhere who could face prosecution. "We have to check everything – from
the people who we were aware of in camps like Sobibor … or also in the
Einsatzgruppen," he said, referring to the death squads responsible for
mass killings, particularly early in the war before the camps were established.
It has not
yet been tested in court whether the Demjanjuk precedent could be extended to
guards of Nazi camps where thousands died but whose sole purpose was not
necessarily murder.
Murder and
related offences are the only charges that are not subject to a statute of
limitations in Germany. Even the narrowest scenario – investigating the guards
of the four death camps: Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor and Treblinka – plus those
involved in the Einsatzgruppen could lead to scores of prosecutions, Zuroff
said.
"We're
talking about an estimated 4,000 people," he said. "Even if only 2%
of those people are alive, we're talking 80 people – and let's assume half of
them are not medically fit to be brought to justice – that leaves us with 40
people, so there is incredible potential."
Immediately
after the war senior Nazis such as Hermann Göring were convicted at war-crimes
trials run by the allied powers, while investigations of lower-ranking
officials fell to German courts. But there was little political will to
aggressively pursue the prosecutions, and many of the trials ended with short
sentences or the acquittal of suspects in greater positions of responsibility
than Demjanjuk allegedly had.
For
example, Karl Streibel, the commandant of the SS camp Trawniki where Demjanjuk
allegedly was trained, was tried in Hamburg but acquitted in 1976 after judges
ruled it had not been proved that he knew what the guards being trained would
be used for. But the current generation of prosecutors and judges in Germany
has shown a willingness to pursue even the lower ranks, something applauded by
Zuroff.
"Our
goal is to bring as many people to justice as possible," Zuroff said.
"They shouldn't be let off if they're less than Mengele, less than Himmler
… in a tragedy of this scope their escaping justice should not in any way mean
that people of a lesser level would be ignored."
Working in
favour of the new investigators is the fact that most suspects would probably
have lived openly and under their own names for decades, believing they had no
prosecutions to fear. Those who are harder to locate will be the focus of the
Wiesenthal centre's new appeal, which Zuroff said would include unspecified
reward money for information that helps uncover a suspect.
However,
Schrimm said it makes sense to try to bring new cases to trial once the
Demjanjuk case is through the appeals process, rather than expend the resources
needed to charge a suspect only to have the case thrown out if Demjanjuk wins.
"The suspects are old, that's why we're preparing everything now so that
as soon as there is a final decision, we can move immediately with
charges," he said.
Zuroff said
he hoped the appeal would be fast-tracked so new charges could be filed.
"This is a test for the German judicial system to see if they can expedite
this in an appropriate manner to enable these cases to go forward," he
added.
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