Leading Nazi hunter Efraim Zuroff is making a final effort to track
down those responsible for the Holocaust before time catches up
with them.
Heading up Operation Last Chance, Zuroff is making one final attempt to identify
and prosecute Nazi criminal.
However, time is not on Zuroff’s side. It
has been over 60 years since the end of the Second World War
and many Nazis who fled Germany have since died without being
held accountable for their crimes. Despite this, the American
maintains that it is imperative that Nazis are brought to justice.
“Firstly, the passage of time in no way diminishes
the guilt of the killers. They are just as guilty today as they
were the day they committed their crime even if they haven’t
been brought to justice yet,” explained Zuroff, who was recruited
by Simon Wiesenthal Centre to coordinate the worldwide search
for surviving Nazis.
He continued: “The second is that we don’t
think old age should afford protection for people who committed
mass murder. In fact, there is not a single civilised country
in the world which has ever limited prosecution solely based
on age.”
Zuroff also believes the victims of the Holocaust
“deserve a serious effort to be made to find the people that
turned them into victims”.
In his years of tracking down Nazis, Zuroff
has uncovered 520 suspects in 24 countries. His search brought
him to Scotland in 1990 when, along with the help of STV, he
identified Edinburgh man Antanas Gecas as a former Nazi auxiliary
police officer responsible for the mass murder of Jews.
“I think its [Gecas’] case, more than any
other case, finally convinced the British government that they
had to set up an official governmental inquiry, which led to
the conclusion that these people committed such terrible crimes
that it simply cannot be ignored…which led to the ability to
prosecute Nazi war criminals in this country.
“I have to point out that without the help
of STV this never would have happened,” he added.
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