World
#LastSeen: Holocaust researchers appeal for Nazi deportation images
A global group of Holocaust researchers is asking for the general public’s assist to search out forgotten photographs of deportations from Nazi Germany.
Archives and museums all over the world home images of Nazi atrocities usually targeted on detention, labour, and extermination camps. However in a brand new initiative, the #LastSeen Undertaking: Photos of Nazi Deportations, historians intend to gather, analyse, and publish photographic proof of the compelled elimination of victims from German cities and cities effectively earlier than they reached a camp.
“We’ve got Holocaust imagery [from camps], the panorama of horrors. However that’s not the place it began,” Alina Bothe, a historian and undertaking supervisor of #LastSeen, instructed Euronews.
“The place it really begins, no less than once we look into Germany, is in small cities and neighbourhoods in larger cities the place individuals are assembled underneath the eyes of their neighbours,” she defined.
The undertaking is a collaboration between 5 establishments in Germany and the US whose aim is to map as many deportation websites and establish as many individuals as doable – sufferer, bystander, and perpetrator – in photographs from archives in addition to people.
Within the face of rising Holocaust denialism and antisemitism, public entry to deportation footage may help restore faces, names, and tales to Jewish, Gypsy, different ethnic minority, gay, and disabled victims. In any other case, they is perhaps represented in data solely as a quantity on a Nazi transport listing, Bothe mentioned.
‘This occurred some other place’
A grainy color {photograph} taken in Might 1940 within the German city of Asberg is all of the extra alarming for its mundane setting.
The picture reveals, underneath a transparent blue sky, residents watching as 500 of their neighbours from the ethnic Romani and Sinti minorities, together with young children, are marched via the city to be deported to rudimentary camps in occupied Japanese Europe.
“It tells you numerous concerning the breaking down of the essential nature of human solidarity. That’s actually what’s taking place, the genocidal society on full show,” Bothe mentioned.
The truth that these images doc locally-led deportations in the midst of cities in broad daylight can also be an argument in opposition to the once-dominant narrative that Nazi atrocities have been far faraway from German society, based on Wolf Gruner, founding director of the USC Dornsife Middle for Superior Genocide Analysis, one of many organisations engaged on #LastSeen.
The pictures “join the crimes again to Germany,” Gruner instructed Euronews. “That’s a very powerful factor as a result of usually once we discuss concerning the Holocaust, individuals assume that this occurred some other place. A number of individuals did this.”
“However the mass deportations, they might not be hidden. Folks have been marched via the streets, they have been transported on vehicles, and everyone might see it,” he mentioned.
“And folks additionally needed to make decisions in these moments,” Gruner added. “Would they protest in opposition to this? Would they be silent? Would they assist with the deportations? From this attitude, it actually consists of the query concerning the particular person decisions concerning the persecution.”
‘A really most popular memento’
The undertaking has to date collected deportation stills from no less than 60 areas all through Germany, however there are some puzzling gaps. So far, the group has discovered no pictures from Berlin, the place roughly 200 deportations passed off.
“In fact somebody took photographs,” Bothe mentioned, “it was a contemporary, rich metropolis, individuals had cameras.”
The query is would somebody as we speak recognise what was taking place within the footage? Are they in an archive, or have they been saved in somebody’s attic, forgotten for many years?
Even archive workers could not know they’ve deportation footage, and in Germany, researchers are assured that the majority pictures will likely be present in official establishments.
The story is totally different in the US, Britain, and different English-speaking nations the place photographs are more likely to be within the arms of people relatively than organisations.
Some pictures belong to Holocaust survivors or victims’ households, however, “after the warfare, liberators usually took souvenirs with them, and pictures have been a really most popular memento and trophy,” Gruner mentioned.
“[Soldiers] took picture albums from SS officers, they took albums from different officers, additionally particular person images,” he defined.
Alina Bothe estimated about 70% of identified deportation footage have been taken by perpetrators together with Nazi officers, native police, and authorities.
As Holocaust survivors and navy veterans die of outdated age, their youngsters and grandchildren are discovering themselves clearing out closets, attics, garages, and storage rooms the place, Gruner mentioned, there’s a “window of alternative” to search out unknown pictures and protect historic reminiscence.
The #LastSeen Undertaking is trying to find footage from the primary mass expulsion of Polish Jews from Germany in 1938 to the mass deportations to camps that elevated in scope till the top of the warfare.
Researchers hope to develop the undertaking from Germany to the remainder of Europe within the coming years.
An interactive picture atlas for the general public to discover and an academic recreation for college students will likely be revealed on March 7 in German at lastseen.org.
World
French high court upholds ex-president's corruption conviction
France’s highest court has upheld an appeal court decision which had found former President Nicolas Sarkozy guilty of corruption and influence peddling while he was the country’s head of state.
Sarkozy, 69, faces a year in prison, but is expected to ask to be detained at home with an electronic bracelet — as is the case for any sentence of two years or less.
He was found guilty of corruption and influence peddling by both a Paris court in 2021 and an appeals court in 2023 for trying to bribe a magistrate in exchange for information about a legal case in which he was implicated.
“The convictions and sentences are therefore final,” a Court of Cassation statement on Wednesday said.
FRANCE’S MACRON NAMES CENTRIST ALLY BAYROU AS NEXT PRIME MINISTER
Sarkozy, who was France’s president from 2007 to 2012, retired from public life in 2017 though still plays an influential role in French conservative politics. He was among the guests who attended the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral earlier this month.
Sarkozy, in a statement posted on X, said “I will assume my responsibilities and face all the consequences.”
He added: “I have no intention of complaining. But I am not prepared to accept the profound injustice done to me.”
Sarkozy said he will seek to bring the case to the European Court of Human Rights, and hopes those proceedings will result in “France being condemned.”
He reiterated his “full innocence.”
“My determination is total in this case as in all others,” he concluded.
Sarkozy’s lawyer, Patrice Spinosi, said his client “will comply” with the ruling. This means the former president will have to wear an electronic bracelet, Spinosi said.
It is the first time in France’s modern history that a former president has been convicted and sentenced to a prison term for actions during his term.
Sarkozy’s predecessor, Jacques Chirac, was found guilty in 2011 of misuse of public money during his time as Paris mayor and was given a two-year suspended prison sentence.
Sarkozy has been involved in several other legal cases. He has denied any wrongdoing.
He faces another trial next month in Paris over accusations he took millions of dollars from then-Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi to illegally finance his successful 2007 campaign.
The corruption case that led to Wednesday’s ruling focused on phone conversations that took place in February 2014.
At the time, investigative judges had launched an inquiry into the financing of Sarkozy’s 2007 presidential campaign. During the inquiry, they discovered that Sarkozy and his lawyer, Thierry Herzog, were communicating via secret mobile phones registered to the alias “Paul Bismuth.”
Wiretapped conversations on those phones led prosecutors to suspect Sarkozy and Herzog of promising magistrate Gilbert Azibert a job in Monaco in exchange for leaking information about another legal case involving Sarkozy. Azibert never got the post and legal proceedings against Sarkozy have been dropped in the case he was seeking information about.
Prosecutors had concluded, however, that the proposal still constitutes corruption under French law, even if the promise wasn’t fulfilled. Sarkozy vigorously denied any malicious intention in his offer to help Azibert.
Azibert and Herzog have also been found guilty in the case.
World
EU ministers water down proposal on child sexual abuse
A proposal on combatting child sexual abuse has been watered down by some EU justice ministers, with others expressing their regret at certain elements of the proposal being removed entirely.
With the development of new technologies, sexual abuse of children has seen a rise in Europe.
The EU is therefore looking to update its directive on combatting the sexual abuse and sexual exploitation of children, which dates back to 2011.
However, the EU Commission’s initial proposal has been watered down by the justice ministers of several EU countries. Seven Member States, which include Belgium, Finland and Ireland, expressed their regret at the removal of certain parts of the proposal.
“We deeply regret that the majority of Member States were unable to support a more ambitious approach aimed at ensuring that children who have reached the age of sexual consent receive the strongest and most comprehensive legal protection possible against unwanted sexual acts,” they wrote in a press release.
Key issues remained unaddressed
Isaline Wittorski, EU regional coordinator at child rights organisation ECPAT International, is particularly concerned regarding Member States’ opposition to the extension of the limitation period for pursuing child sexual abuse cases.
She also regrets that “grooming” – the process by which an adult intentionally approaches minors and manipulates them for sexual purposes – for children who have reached the age of sexual consent was not addressed by the Council.
“The Member States expressly refused to recognise in the text that a child in a state of shock or intoxication cannot be considered to have consented to sexual abuse”, she adds.
Harmonisation of penalties
The Commission’s proposal aims to harmonise the definition of sexual violence against minors and penalties within the EU.
It will also update criminal law in order to criminalise the rape of children broadcast live on the internet, as well as the possession and exchange of paedophile manuals and child abuse deepfakes.
MEPs, for their part, should support a more ambitious directive. Birgit Sippel, a German MEP (S&D), is calling for longer limitation periods.
“Many children who have been abused take years or even decades before they dare to go to court or to a police station. So this is a very important step that is missing from the current directive,” the MEP told Euronews.
“Unfortunately, what I see is that the Council is watering down almost everything that could improve the current directive. It will therefore be very important for the EU Parliament to maintain a very strong position and force the Council to go further and not limit itself to the current directive,” she added.
The proposal’s text can still be amended. After a vote by MEPs, negotiations will take place between the EU Commission, the European Council and the European Parliament.
It is estimated that one in five children in Europe is a victim of some form of sexual violence.
In 2022 alone, there were 1.5 million reports of child sexual abuse in the EU.
Ministers also failed to reach agreement on another regulatory text aimed at combatting the sexual abuse of children online, which aims to force platforms to detect and remove content depicting sexual violence against minors. This proposal caused a clash between children’s rights defenders and privacy protection lobbies.
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