donderdag 31 maart 2016

Cannibalism 'rampant' at Nazi concentration camp, new documents reveal


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Cannibalism 'rampant' at Nazi concentration camp, new documents reveal

'At night you killed or were killed'
    Bergen-AP-2.jpg
The only British survivor found at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at the end of the Second World War detailed in newly-released documents how victims of Nazi atrocities had resorted to cannibalism to stay alive.
Harold Le Druillenec said that he spent all his time at Belsen heaving bodies into graves in a graphic account recounting the horrors that he had seen while surviving three concentration camps. More than 70,000 people died at Bergen-Belsen in 1941-45.
He was arrested in Jersey the day before D-Day in 1944 for helping his sister to harbour an escaped Russian prisoner-of-war and for non-cooperation with German occupying forces in the Channel Islands. He went on to give evidence at the Belsen trials after the war at which dozens of SS men and women were convicted for their roles in crimes at the camp.
"I survived three concentration camps by a lot of luck and the ability to 'live outside the carcase'. I retain this trait,” Mr Le Druillenec wrote in his note released today by the National Archives in which he sought compensation for his disability.
He said there was no food, water and sleep was impossible at Belsen, the worst of the three camps where he was held.
He wrote: "All my time here was spent in heaving dead bodies into the mass graves kindly dug for us by 'outside workers' for we no longer had the strength for that type of work which, fortunately, must have been observed by the camp authorities.
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Poland funeral honours Auschwitz survivor Bartoszewski
"Jungle law reigned among the prisoners; at night you killed or were killed; by day cannibalism was rampant.
"The bulk of Auschwitz had been transferred to Belsen when I arrived and it was here that I heard the expression 'there is only one way out of here - through the chimney!' (crematorium).
He was freed after 10 months' imprisonment, during which he lost more than half his body weight, and spent almost a year recovering from the dysentery, scabies, malnutrition and septicaemia that he suffered.
The Foreign Office eventually agreed to pay him compensation, awarding him £1,835 - around £30,000 today - for the time he spent imprisoned and his disabilities, which were deemed to be "less than 50%".

Israel Polarized Over Soldier Who Killed Wounded Palestinian


New York Times

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Israelis demonstrated outside a military court in Kiryat Malakhi on Tuesday to support a soldier who was suspended after being caught on video shooting a wounded Palestinian assailant in the head.CreditAmir Cohen/Reuters
JERUSALEM — The case of the Israeli soldier who shot a Palestinian assailant in the head as he lay wounded and subdued on the ground is whipping up a public and political storm and posing a rare challenge to the military’s high command, usually the most popular body in the country.
In a letter sent to commanders and soldiers on Wednesday, Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot, the chief of staff, underlined the predicament facing the army as it contends with an upsurge in Palestinian violence — and finds itself facing a hardened public mood fanned by some politicians who say Palestinian assailants must not be left alive.
“The commanders, and I first among them, will continue to give backing to any soldier who errs in the heat of battle against an enemy endangering the lives of civilians and soldiers,” General Eisenkot wrote. “That said, we will not hesitate to fully implement the law against soldiers and commanders if they deviate from the operational and moral standards according to which we work.”
Posters appeared in Tel Aviv soon after the shooting depicting General Eisenkot, who had swiftly condemned it, as the gullible Persian king who initially went along with a plot to kill all the Jews in the story of Purim — the holiday celebrated last week. Exhorting the general to resign, along with the prime minister and the defense minister, the posters bore the legend: “Jewish blood is not to be abandoned. He who rises up to slay you, slay him first.”
After six months of Palestinian stabbing, shooting and vehicular attacks against Israelis, a simmering debate has burst into a heated argument over what constitutes appropriate use of force, and what is excessive. While many Israelis have denounced the shooting last week, which wascaught on video, as a grave breach of proper military conduct, many others are calling the accused soldier a hero. By Wednesday nearly 57,000 Israelis had signed an online petition demanding he be given a merit citation.
The education minister, Naftali Bennett, has accused the leadership of being “quick to pounce on the soldier.” He and other right-wing politicians, activists and the soldier’s family are now waging a campaign against the defense minister, Moshe Yaalon, and the army’s top officers.
Israelis have voiced outrage on social media, angered by what many see as too hasty a judgment by the political and military leadership and by aninitial pronouncement by the military prosecutor that the soldier was under investigation on suspicion of murder. Supporters claim that he has been abandoned by the system that ought to be backing him. Experts said the emotional response partly reflected a natural empathy for soldiers in a country where most 18-year-olds are conscripted for up to 32 months.
“This is a test,” said Udi Dekel, an expert in civil-military relations at the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University.
“On the one hand,” he said, “the army has to be attentive to the feelings of the people.” On the other, he said, “you cannot run an army based on social networks and relatives.” And the military cannot change the rules of engagement because of a political and public onslaught, Mr. Dekel, a former brigadier general, said.
The episode began last Thursday, when two Palestinian men stabbed and wounded an Israeli soldier at a checkpoint in the West Bank city of Hebron. His fellow soldiers shot them both, killing one and wounding the other, who was identified as Abed al-Fatah al-Sharif, 21.
The accused soldier arrived at the scene about six minutes later, by which time calm appeared to have been restored. The video shows him cocking his rifle and shooting Mr. Sharif again, this time in the head, as he lay on the road.
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Israeli soldiers stood near the body of the Palestinian who was killed after attacking a soldier in the West Bank city Hebron last week. CreditHazem Bader/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Lawyers representing the soldier say he acted to save the lives of his comrades in the belief that Mr. Sharif, who was still moving, might have been concealing an explosive belt under his jacket.
The soldier did not warn other soldiers or the medical staff to move away from Mr. Sharif, and had Mr. Sharif been wearing explosives, critics noted, the soldier’s shot could have detonated them.
An Israeli military court order has banned the use of the soldier’s name in all press accounts, including those of foreign news organizations accredited in Israel, even though the soldier has a Facebook page and has been widely identified by name in social media.
The soldier’s Facebook page suggests sympathies with some far-right causes. He told another soldier at the scene that Mr. Sharif had stabbed his friend and “deserved to die,” according to Israeli news media reports.
At a hearing on Tuesday, a military judge said the evidence so far was not clear-cut. Prosecutors would not specify what charges they were considering, appearing to have backed off from the idea of a murder charge.
About 30 Israelis, two Americans and a Palestinian bystander have been killed by Palestinians since Oct. 1. Israeli forces or civilians have shot dead 180 Palestinians during the same period, most while they were carrying out attacks or attempting attacks, according to the Israeli authorities, and the rest killed in clashes with Israeli security forces.
Palestinian officials and human rights groups have accused Israeli forces of shooting to kill in some other instances captured on video where the threat appeared to have passed. Among them was a case in November when a teenage Palestinian girl who had tried to stab passers-by with scissors was shot by a police officer as she lay on the ground.
The military has been clear about its regulations on when soldiers can open fire. It says that assailants must be quickly incapacitated, but that once neutralized they should not be killed. General Eisenkot told high school students recently that he would not want a soldier “to empty a magazine at a 13-year-old girl with scissors.”
A February survey conducted by the Israel Democracy Institute, an independent research group, found that 50 percent of the Jewish public disagreed with General Eisenkot’s position while 48 percent supported it.
Prof. Tamar Hermann, a political scientist who directs surveys for the institute, said that although the Israeli public had attacked the military many times in the past, “I don’t remember ever before a chief of staff being criticized for being too soft.”
Now there is growing concern about the mixed messages that may be influencing the soldiers.
Speaking in the Israeli Parliament this week Mr. Yaalon, the defense minister, asked: “What do you want here? A brutish army that has lost its moral backbone?”
“Later,” he said, “we will be checking if there is a connection between the aggression on the Internet, all sorts of statements made by politicians, and the fact that a soldier decided to act in a way that breaches the law, our values and the open-fire regulations.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/31/world/middleeast/israeli-dispute-over-solder-who-shot-palestinian.html?_r=1&hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=second-column-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news