Yahoo – AFP,
Coralie Febvre, 9 February 2016
More than
six million Jews died during the Nazi Holocaust, as survivors revisit
Auschwitz
on the 70th anniversary of the concentration camp's liberation in
January 2015
(AFP Photo/Janek Skarzynski)
|
Berlin
(AFP) - Two former SS men will go on trial this month for their alleged
complicity in the murder of thousands of people at Auschwitz, as Germany accelerates
its bid to prosecute ageing Third Reich criminals.
Reinhold
Hanning, 93, faces court in the western town of Detmold from Thursday, charged
with at least 170,000 counts of accessory to murder in his role as a former
guard at the camp in occupied Poland.
Hubert
Zafke, 95, will have to answer at least 3,681 counts of complicity in killings
in separate proceedings in the eastern town of Neubrandenburg from February 29.
Zafke was a
medical orderly at the camp in a period when 14 trains carrying prisoners --
including the teenage diarist Anne Frank -- arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau where
many would eventually be killed in the gas chambers.
Holocaust
survivor Angela Orosz, who will take the witness stand in the Hanning trial,
told AFP that all Auschwitz staff "were part of this killing
machine."
"Without
these people and their active support for the Holocaust, what happened in
Auschwitz, the murder of 1.1 million people in just a few years, would not have
been possible, and perhaps many of my family members would still be
alive," said Orosz, who was born in Auschwitz just over a month before it
was liberated on January 27, 1945.
The
defendants face between three and 15 years in jail, but in view of their
advanced age and the period required for any appeals, they are unlikely to
serve time.
'Age has
no bearing'
Nevertheless,
Andreas Brendel, who leads the prosecuting team against Hanning, said Germany
"owes it to victims and their relatives" to pursue Third Reich
criminals.
"Age
has no bearing for me," he said.
Ronald
Lauder, president of the World Jewish Congress, agreed.
"If
anyone deemed responsible for any aspect of the Holocaust is still able to
stand trial, he or she should be prosecuted," he told AFP.
"As
long as it's possible to bring any of them to justice, it must be done. There
is no statute of limitation for mass murder, and there shouldn’t be."
The two
trials come on the heels of last year's high-profile case against Oskar Groening,
dubbed the "Bookkeeper of Auschwitz".
Groening
was sentenced last July to four years in prison, even though he had previously
been cleared by German authorities after lengthy criminal probes dating back to
the 1970s.
But the
legal foundation for prosecuting ex-Nazis changed in 2011 with the German
conviction of former death camp guard John Demjanjuk, solely on the basis of
his having worked at the Sobibor camp in occupied Poland.
Separately,
a German court announced Friday that another former guard at Auschwitz,
93-year-old Ernst Remmel, would have to stand trial in April.
Holocaust
survivor Angela Orosz will testify against Reinhold Hanning, who was
a Nazi
guard at the Auschwitz concentration camp (AFP Photo/Philipp Schulze)
|
'Facilitated killings'
Hanning,
like Demjanjuk, was a camp guard, and stands accused of having watched over the
selection of which prisoners were fit for labour, and which should be sent to
gas chambers.
He is also
deemed to have been aware of the regular mass shooting of inmates at the camp,
as well as the systematic starvation of prisoners.
"Through
his capacity as a guard, he facilitated... the several thousand killings of
inmates by the main perpetrator," prosecutors said.
Hanning has
admitted to working in Auschwitz but denies a role in the killings.
Zafke
likewise claimed he knew nothing of the mass murder.
Ahead of
proceedings, prosecutors said the former medic was "aware of the purpose
of the Birkenau camp as an extermination camp" as well as of its
structure.
"Given
his awareness, the accused lent support to the organisation of the camp and was
thereby both involved in and advanced the extermination," said
prosecutors, who are meanwhile seeking to have the presiding judges removed for
partiality.
The
prosecutors claim that the judges are planning to declare Zafke unfit for trial
on the opening day, thereby halting the proceedings.
A first
court had earlier quashed the trial, finding that Zafke was suffering from
dementia.
But an
appeals court overturned that decision. It acknowledged that he had
"cognitive impairments and low physical capacity" but ordered regular
breaks during the hearings, as well as medical care.
'Last Auschwitz baby' speaks out: I'm 'angry' at extremism rising again in Europe https://t.co/C40SAdmoua pic.twitter.com/7QYQG8W6Lh— AFP news agency (@AFP) February 9, 2016
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