Ex camp guard, 93, gets suspended sentence as accessory to murder of 5,230
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Ex camp guard, 93, gets suspended sentence as accessory to murder of 5,230

Bruno Dey said he was shaken by the testimony of survivors during his trial and apologised to 'those who went through the hell of this madness'

Inside the Stutthof gas chamber
Inside the Stutthof gas chamber

In likely one of the last such trials, a 93-year-old former concentration camp guard was given a two-year suspended sentence on Thursday – a decision that the Simon Wiesenthal Centre’s chief Nazi hunter is calling a travesty.

A Hamburg court found Bruno Dey guilty as an accessory in the murders of 5,230 people in the Stutthof camp near Gdansk, today in Poland but then a part of Germany. The count is reportedly based on the number of people murdered while Dey was stationed there.

Karen Pollock, Chief Executive, Holocaust Educational Trust said: “The passage of time is no barrier to justice when it comes to the heinous crimes of the Holocaust.”

The Holocaust was a unique episode in our history where six million men, women and children were systematically murdered simply because they were Jewish. Many who survived were the only survivors of their families, towns and communities. Stutthof was infamous for its cruelty and suffering, with survivors calling it “hell on earth”.

Tragically, the victims of the Holocaust did not have the luxury of growing old or having families, as this perpetrator did.”

Efraim Zuroff of the Wiesenthal Centre’s Jerusalem office told the Jewish Telegraphic Agency that the suspended sentence sent the wrong message.

“He goes home happy and survivors have to live with their nightmares,” he said in a telephone interview.

About 14 former concentration camp guards and members of Nazi mass killing squads are under investigation, he said, adding that there is “no documented case of any German being executed for refusing to kill Jews.”

Their advanced age and that of survivors make future trials difficult.

Dey, who was tried in juvenile court because of his age at the time of the crimes, had admitted being an SS guard in Stutthof from August 1944 to April 1945 after being drafted into the German Wehrmacht. He was assigned to the camp after being found unfit to serve on the front.

According to a BBC report, Dey said he was shaken by the testimony of survivors during his trial and apologised to “those who went through the hell of this madness.” But he also said that though he had known of gas chambers and witnessed people suffering, he had not known of the extent of the atrocities.

Of the estimated 100,000 people deported there, more than 60,000 died. Most of the prisoners were non-Jewish Poles, along with some Polish Jews.

State prosecutor Lars Mahnke contended that Dey had known what was going on and actively prevented people from fleeing.

“If you are part of the machinery of mass murder, it is no defence to say you looked the other way,” he told the court, according to German media reports.

Germany has prosecuted several accused accomplices to Nazi war crimes since the 2011 conviction in Munich of former concentration camp guard John Demjanjuk, who was found guilty as an accessory in the murders of nearly 30,000 Jews in the Sobibor death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland.

That case set a precedent in that being a guard at a death camp was sufficient to prove complicity in murder. Since then, Zuroff has sought tips on possible perpetrators in an effort titled Operation Last Chance. But none of the war criminals convicted since has served jail time, he said.

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