From the BBC:
"Former Auschwitz guard Reinhold Hanning convicted"
A 94-year-old former guard at the Auschwitz death camp has been sentenced to five years in jail.
Reinhold Hanning was found guilty of being an accessory to the murder of at least 170,000 people. He was an SS guard at Auschwitz from 1942 to 1944. He has said he knew what was going on at the camp but did not act to stop it. The Nazis killed about 1.1 million people - mostly Jews - at Auschwitz in occupied southern Poland. The verdict came after a trial lasting nearly four months in the western German city of Detmold. Observers said Hanning, in a wheelchair, remained silent and emotionless for much of the trial, avoiding eye contact with anyone in the courtroom. It could be one of the last trials of Nazi officials involved in the Holocaust. There were just four people in the courtroom today who perhaps truly understand the significance of this verdict. Hedy Bohm, Erna de Vries, William Glied and Leon Schwarzbaum sat, straight backed, in the front row surrounded by friends and family, and listened intently. Each of them endured and survived the unimaginable horror of Auschwitz. By giving evidence during the trial and describing some of their experiences in harrowing detail, they helped to secure this conviction. Mr Glied, a dignified man with thick white hair and a ready smile, now lives in Canada. He was accompanied today by his daughter and granddaughter. Before the verdict he told me that the actual sentence was immaterial. "What matters," he said "is that he is convicted by a German court for what he did." At the trial, about a dozen elderly Auschwitz survivors testified against Hanning, giving harrowing accounts of their experiences. Prosecutors said he met Jewish prisoners as they arrived at the camp and may have escorted some to the gas chambers. Hanning's lawyers had argued that he had never personally killed or beaten anyone. German prosecutors were required, until recently, to provide evidence that defendants were directly involved in the killings. That changed with the 2011 conviction of John Demjanjuk, when a judge concluded that his activities as a camp worker in Nazi-occupied Poland amounted to complicity in mass murder. Last year a German court sentenced Oskar Groening, 94, to four years in jail as an accessory to the murder of at least 300,000 people at Auschwitz. Known as the SS "book-keeper of Auschwitz", Groening was allegedly responsible for counting banknotes confiscated from prisoners.
Auschwitz-Birkenau death camp
- Construction began in 1940 on site that grew to 40sq km (15 sq miles)
- About one million Jews were killed at the camp in Nazi-occupied Poland
- Other victims included Roma (Gypsies), disabled people, homosexuals, dissidents, non-Jewish Poles and Soviet prisoners
^ This was the right, and only move, for Germany. Gone are the days when German courts and officials allowed known former Nazis to live in the open and not be punished for the crimes they helped to commit. For too many decades after World War 2 ended Germany society (mostly in West Germany) was of hiding the truth and hoping no one would dig anything up. Now a new generation of Germans have come of age and in positions of influence to challenge that and so the few, old Nazis left are finally being brought to justice. Murder should never have a statue of limitations and the current age of the killer shouldn't matter. The only thing that matters is bringing justice to the victims and Germany did that today. ^
http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-36560416
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