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| A 93-year-old former SS guard holds his walking stick during his trial at the regional court in Muenster, Germany (AFP Photo/Guido Kirchner) |
Hamburg (AFP) - A former SS guard, 93, said he was sorry for his actions as he went on trial in Germany on Thursday for complicity in the murder of more than 5,000 people at a Nazi concentration camp during World War II.
In what
could be one of the last such cases of surviving Nazi guards, Bruno Dey stands
accused of abetting the murder of 5,230 people when he worked at the Stutthof
camp near what was then Danzig, now Gdansk in Poland.
While he
insisted that he did not join the deadly operation voluntarily, he voiced
regret for his actions.
"That's
what he said in his interrogation: He felt sorry for what he did," said
his lawyer Stefan Waterkamp.
"It
was also clear to him that (the inmates) were not in there because they were
criminals, but for anti-Semitic, racist and other reasons. He had compassion
for them. But he did not see himself in a position to free them."
Seated in a
wheelchair, Dey wore a hat and sunglasses and hid his face behind a red folder
as he entered the courtroom.
Waterkamp
said his client was "ready to respond to all questions", underlining
that Dey "did not join the SS voluntarily".
Prosecutors
said nevertheless that as an "SS guard at Stutthof concentration camp
between August 1944 and April 1945, he is believed to have provided support to
the gruesome killing of Jewish prisoners in particular".
Although
the trial comes decades on, Ben Cohen, grandchild of a survivor, said
"it's a really powerful way to acknowledge that we're not just going to
look away and we're not just going to just turn around and say 'this is
finished, we do not need to think about it anymore.' These things are as
relevant today as they ever were."
Jewish
groups underlined the trial's importance in light of contemporary far-right
anti-Semitic violence after last week's deadly shooting in the eastern city of
Halle that included a synagogue.
"Why
are you doing this trial today? Remember what happened in Halle," said
Efraim Zuroff of the Nazi-hunting Simon Wiesenthal Centre.
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The
93-year-old Bruno Dey admitted in court to being an SS guard, but the
defence
underlined that he did not join the SS voluntarily' (AFP Photo/Markus Scholz)
|
'Cog in
the murder machine'
During
Dey's time at the camp, the "Final Solution" order to exterminate
Jews was issued by the Nazi leadership, leading to the systematic killing of
inmates in gas chambers, while others died of starvation or because they were
denied medical care, prosecutors said.
Dey is
being tried by a juvenile court in Hamburg because he was 17 when he first
worked at Stutthof.
According
to German media, Dey, who now lives in Hamburg, became a baker after the war.
Married
with two daughters, he supplemented his income by working as a truck driver,
before later taking on a job in building maintenance.
The law
finally caught up with him as a result of the legal precedent set when former
guard John Demjanjuk was convicted in 2011 on the basis that he served as part
of the Nazi killing machine at the Sobibor camp in occupied Poland.
Since then,
Germany has been racing to put on trial surviving SS personnel on those grounds
rather than for murders or atrocities directly linked to the individual
accused.
In the same
vein, Dey is "accused of having contributed as a cog in the murder
machine, in full knowledge of the circumstances, so that the order to kill
could be carried out," prosecutors said.
'Speak
up'
During pre-trial
questioning, Dey said he ended up in the SS-Totenkopfsturmbahn (Death's Head
Battalion) that ran the camp only because of a heart condition that prevented
him from being sent to the front, according to Tagesspiegel daily.
Dey also
reportedly confirmed he knew of the camp's gas chambers and admitted seeing
"emaciated figures, people who had suffered", but insisted he was not
guilty, according to the daily Die Welt.
The Nazis
set up the Stutthof camp in 1939, initially using it to detain Polish political
prisoners.
But it
ended up holding 110,000 detainees, including many Jews. Some 65,000 people
perished in the camp.
Since the
landmark Demjanjuk ruling, German courts have convicted Oskar Groening, an
accountant at Auschwitz, and Reinhold Hanning, a former SS guard at the same
camp, for complicity in mass murder.
Both men
were found guilty at the age of 94 but died before they could be imprisoned.


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