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The
Simon Wiesenthal Center and Spanish NGO Nizkor requested Monday
that the Spanish government extradite four former Nazis, currently
facing deportation from the United States, who allegedly murdered
numerous Spaniards in concentration camps.
For the past 50 years the four ex-SS officers - John Demjanjuk, a retired, 88-year-old
auto worker in Ohio who is now also being sought by Germany, Johann
Lepprich, Josias Kumpf and Anton Tittjung - have been living in
the United States and were each discovered over the past decade
by the special CIA unit which specializes in finding Nazi war criminals
in America.
The American courts could only evict the four former Nazis on immigration violations
and have stripped the men of their American citizenships.
The four criminals are currently waiting on American
soil, as no country will accept them.
Dr. Efraim Zuroff, chief Nazi hunter of The Simon
Wiesenthal Center, and Gloria Trinidad, lawyer for Nizkor, have
banded together in an attempt to get the Spanish court to try the
four men.
Both Zuroff and Trinidad are acting under Spain's
principle of universal jurisdiction, which states that war crimes,
crimes against humanity, terrorism and other violent crimes can
be prosecuted in Spain even if committed elsewhere.
During World War II, more than 7,000 Spaniards,
mainly leftist Republicans and Jews, were murdered in Nazi concentration
camps such as Mauthausen, Sachenshausen and Flossenberg, camps
where all four men served.
"The willingness of the Spanish authorities
to prosecute these Nazi war criminals would be of great significance
given the current impasse in their cases in the US," said Zuroff.
"Furthermore, holding accountable guards
from camps Mauthhausen, Sachenshausen and Flossenberg, where so
many innocent Spaniards were murdered, would be a form of historic
justice."
On June 19, Nizkor filed the claim with the Spanish
court, which is currently discussing whether or not the claim is
valid.
"It is vital that the Spanish Court
goes through with the extradition of these four former Nazi SS
officers," said Trinidad.
"In Spain, the fact that many Spaniards
died in Nazi concentration camps is not a well-known subject. If
they decide to do the trial it will be a historical mark for Spain."
A prosecutor needs to issue a nonbinding recommendation
on whether the court should agree to study the case and, afterwards,
the court itself has to decide whether to accept the case and consider
filing charges, Trinidad said.
If the lengthy process ends successfully, the
lawsuit will be held on behalf of former Spanish prisoners and
direct family members of former prisoners.
"There are still so many former Nazis
that are alive. People seem to think that they are all dead or
it is a past matter but we cannot let these men's crimes fade," said Trinidad.
"We need to make sure that the court
and politicians prosecute Nazi criminals no matter what their age."
The US Supreme Court refused to hear the appeal
of Demjanjuk last month. But while the US Justice Department noted
that the refusal removes the last impediment to deporting Demjanjuk,
it is unclear what country would be willing to take him.
Demjanjuk was extradited from the US to Israel
in 1986 and was sentenced to death for war crimes and crimes against
humanity. In 1993, however, after new evidence surfaced, the Israeli
Supreme Court ruled that there was reasonable doubt that Demjanjuk
was 'Ivan the Terrible,' and he returned to the US, where the Justice
Department continued efforts to revoke his citizenship on the grounds
that he had served as a guard at death camps.
jpost.com
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