BUDAPEST, HUNGARY (BosNewsLife)--
The Simon Wiesenthal Center says it has discovered the names of hundreds
of Nazi war crimes suspects in Central and Eastern Europe and that
dozens of them are already being investigated by local prosecutors.
The announcement was made in Hungary, where the Center launched
a new stage in a campaign to bring alleged war criminals across
the region
to justice.
Officials said the action is part of "Operation: Last Chance",
which aims to discover the whereabouts of alleged war criminals across
Central and Eastern Europe, 60 years after an estimated six million
Jews perished in the Holocaust.
Toll-free phone lines, publications and financial rewards are among
the non lethal weapons used by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, named
after the famous Nazi hunter, to track down elderly people, who
once carried
out Adolf Hitler's Final Solution to exterminate all Jews and
others he did not like.
Operation: Last Chance was originally launched in 2002 in the
Baltics, and soon expanded to Poland, Romania and Austria. After
the campaign
was launched in Croatia, it was finally time for Hungary, which
was a close ally of Nazi Germany during most of World War Two
when 600,000
Hungarian Jews were massacred.
The Israel Director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Efraim Zuroff,
told BosNewsLife he is frustrated that in countries like Hungary "not
a single war criminal was brought to justice" since the collapse
of Communism in 1989, although many people collaborated with Nazi Germany.
"
Among the Central and Eastern European countries only Croatia has recently
prosecuted a Nazi war criminal. A general is now on the run after he
saw his name appear," said Zuroff, who recently met the Croatian
president to work out a strategy to find suspects.
MANY SUSPECTS
296 suspects have already been identified across the region
and so far 73 people have had their cases send to local
prosecutors, Zuroff
stressed. Zuroff admitted that "Operation: Last Chance" comes
late, but said his Center lacked the resources to start the campaign
earlier in former Communist countries.
"
Before you were totally dependent on the Communist authorities who
played there own political games and only released information that
would serve their purposes. Today the archives are open in most countries
and there is full access and maximum or almost maximum research can
be carried out," he said.
He added his organization is offering roughly 10-thousand
dollars for each tip that leads to the prosecution
and punishment of
a Nazi war
criminal. While money encouraged people to come forward
with information on neighbors or others involved in
war crimes,
not everyone accepted
the rewards, Zuroff explained.
NO CASH
"
I have to say that in many cases many people have submitted very important
information and openly said that they don’t want the money," he
said. "But there is no question that the money and the publicity
around "Operation: Last Chance" was the trigger for people
to come forward to unburden themselves with information they have been
walking around with for sixty years."
Among those approaching the Center with information
was a woman in a Hungarian village who lived
near the garden "where three Hungarian
Jews were buried after being forced to dig their own graves," said
Nazi hunter Leibish Polnauer of Israel who is the son of Hungarian
Holocaust survivors. "They were killed by Hungarians who were
guarding a group of refugees on their way to a concentration camp or
labor camp," he stressed, quoting the unidentified woman. "The
guards were angry because a hungry Jewish girl had successfully backed
for a piece of bread from another child, in exchange for her red back."
Yet the founder of the Targum Shlishi Foundation,
which supports "Operation:
Last Chance", denies that searching for elderly Nazis must be
seen as seeking revenge. "This is not about revenge, this is about
justice", said the soft spoken Aryeh Rubin, whose parents suffered
in the Holocaust. "It is too late for revenge," he told BosNewsLife. "This
people lived (their) lives for 60 years. They raised families. They
lived normal lives, while their victims lie as dust in the ground."
MOVE CRITICIZED
Some historians as well as right wing commentators
and politicians in Hungary have criticized
the hunt for Hungarian
fascists,
saying it only singles out one group while
for instance Communist criminals
remain at large. But the Simon Wiesenthal
Center says it has only a mandate to investigate war
crimes, and
that
it encourages
Hungarians
to initiate similar actions against Communists.
It hopes that the prosecution of alleged
war criminals in local courts, will help
people
to better understand
their
troubled
history. "This
comes at a crucial time, at a time when history is rewritten," said
Zuroff.
Operation: Last Chance is also scheduled
to be launched in Argentina, where many
European Nazis
are believed
to hide.
Germany will
follow in September, while organizers also
plan to launch the action in
Ukraine, after elections later this year,
BosNewsLife
learned.
|