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Read Ebook: Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal Nuremburg 14 November 1945-1 October 1946 Volume 08 by Various

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Sixty-third Day, Wednesday, 20 February 1946, Morning Session 1 Afternoon Session 31

Sixty-fourth Day, Thursday, 21 February 1946, Morning Session 53 Afternoon Session 81

Sixty-fifth Day, Friday, 22 February 1946, Morning Session 105 Afternoon Session 125

Sixty-sixth Day, Saturday, 23 February 1946, Morning Session 159 Afternoon Session 186

Sixty-seventh Day, Monday, 25 February 1946, Morning Session 202 Afternoon Session 230

Sixty-eighth Day, Tuesday, 26 February 1946, Morning Session 251 Afternoon Session 281

Sixty-ninth Day, Wednesday, 27 February 1946, Morning Session 300 Afternoon Session 324

Seventieth Day, Thursday, 28 February 1946, Morning Session 353 Afternoon Session 383

Seventy-first Day, Friday, 1 March 1946, Morning Session 409 Afternoon Session 431

Seventy-second Day, Saturday, 2 March 1946, Morning Session 468

Seventy-third Day, Monday, 4 March 1946, Morning Session 489 Afternoon Session 517

Seventy-fourth Day, Tuesday, 5 March 1946, Morning Session 532

Seventy-fifth Day, Wednesday, 6 March 1946, Morning Session 554 Afternoon Session 578

Seventy-sixth Day, Thursday, 7 March 1946, Morning Session 597 Afternoon Session 621

GENERAL R. A. RUDENKO : Mr. President, with the permission of the Tribunal, evidence on the count "Despoliation and Plunder of Private, Public, and National Property" will be presented by the State Counsellor of Justice, Second Class, L. R. Shenin.

STATE COUNSELLOR OF JUSTICE OF THE SECOND CLASS L. R. SHENIN : May it please Your Honors, my task consists in presenting to the Tribunal evidence of the criminal and predatory motives of Hitlerite aggression and of the monstrous plundering of the peoples of Czechoslovakia, Poland, Yugoslavia, Greece, and the U.S.S.R.

My colleagues have already proved that the attack on the U.S.S.R., as well as on other European countries, was planned and prepared beforehand by the criminal Hitlerite Government.

I shall submit to the Tribunal a number of the conspirators' original documents, statements, and speeches, which in the aggregate will prove that the despoliation and plunder of private, public, and national property in the occupied territories was also premeditated, planned, and prepared on a large scale, and that thus, simultaneously with the development of their purely military and strategic plans of attack, the Hitlerites with the cold-blooded deliberateness of professional robbers and murderers also developed and prepared beforehand the plan of organized plunder and marauding, after having minutely and accurately calculated their future profits, their criminal gains, their robbers' spoils.

The official report of the Czechoslovak Government on the crimes committed by the Hitlerites on the territory of Czechoslovakia, the first victim of German aggression, has already been submitted to the Tribunal as Exhibit Number USSR-60 .

"It is our destiny to belong to a superior race. A lower race needs less room, less clothing, less food, and less culture, than a superior race."

This promise, this program of action, found its concrete expression in the fact that the Hitlerite conspirators subjected all territories occupied by them to unrestrained plunder, highly varied in form and method and entirely shameless in its devastating results. The report of the Czechoslovak Government contains a large number of examples corroborating the corresponding counts of the Indictment.

I shall read this section into the record starting with the first paragraph on Page 72 of the Russian translation. I read:

"The German plan of campaign against Czechoslovakia was aimed not only against the republic as a political and military unit, but also against the very existence of the Czechoslovak people, who were to be robbed not only of all political rights and cultural life, but of their wealth and their financial and industrial resources.

" Immediate Plunder.

" After Munich.

"Immediately after Munich the Germans seized all the industrial and commercial concerns belonging to the Czechs and Jews in the seized areas of the republic; this was done without any compensation. Czechs and Jews were robbed of their property and of their office and plant equipment, usually by violence and bloodshed."

The following characteristic fact is mentioned in the report, namely, the way in which Hitler became acquainted with Czechoslovakia, which he had just seized. I shall read into the record Subparagraph B of this section, entitled, "After the Invasion of 15 March 1939." The Tribunal will find this excerpt on Pages 3 and 4 of the document book. I quote:

"Hitler entered Prague at nightfall on 15 March 1939, and spent the night there in the famous Hradschin castle. He left on the following day, taking with him a number of valuable tapestries. We mention this robbery not because of the value of the stolen objects, but as an example set by the head of the Party and of the German State on the very first day of invasion.

"The German troops who invaded Prague brought with them a staff of German economic experts, that is, experts in economic looting.

"Rolling stock, carriages, engines, and so on were removed to the Reich. All the rails in the Protectorate which were in good condition were lifted and sent to Germany; later they were replaced by old rails brought from Germany. New cars fresh from the factory which were on order for the Prague municipal tramways and had just been completed were deflected from their purpose and sent to the Reich.

"The vessels belonging to the Czechoslovak Danube Steam Navigation Company were divided between the Reich and Hungary.

"Valuable objects of art and furniture disappeared from public buildings, without even an attempt at any legal justification of such robbery; pictures, statues, tapestries were taken to Germany. The Czech National Museum, the Modern Art Gallery, and public and private collections were plundered.

"The German Reich Commissioner of the Czechoslovak National Bank stopped all payments of currency abroad and seized all the gold reserve and foreign currency in the Protectorate. Thus the Germans took 23,000 kilograms of gold of a nominal value of 737,000 million crowns and transferred the gold from the Bank of International Settlement to the Reichsbank."

One of the methods of thorough--I should say total--plunder was the so-called economic Germanization. I submit to the Tribunal as evidence of these crimes the following extract from the official Czechoslovak report. This extract the Tribunal will find on Pages 4 and 5 of the document book:

" Economic Germanization.

"A. Rural. Expropriation.

" After Munich.

"In the areas occupied by the German Army in October 1938 Germany began to settle her nationals on all the farms formerly belonging to Czechs or Jews who had fled for political or racial reasons.

"The Czechoslovak Land Reform Act of 1919, insofar as it benefited Czech nationals, was declared invalid; Czech farmers were expelled from their land and compelled to relinquish their cattle, agricultural implements, and furniture.

"On paper the Czechs received compensation; in fact, however, they were burdened with taxes in order to make good the so-called 'deliberate damage' they were alleged to have caused by their flight. These taxes far exceeded the compensation.

"The large agricultural and government estates of the Czechoslovak Republic automatically became Reich property and came under the jurisdiction of the Reich ministries concerned.

" After the invasion of 15 March 1939.

"After the invasion, German directors, supervisors, and foremen replaced Czech nationals in state-owned enterprises of the Czechoslovak Republic.

"Germanization of private property began, of course, under the slogan 'Aryanization.'

"The Germanization of rural Bohemia and Moravia was entrusted to a special body called 'Deutsche Siedlungsgesellschaft' located in Prague.

"Czech peasants were offered compensation for their food products but at entirely inadequate prices.

"Rural Germanization, apart from Germanization pure and simple, aimed at pauperizing as many well-to-do Czech nationals as possible.

"The Nazis did their utmost to squeeze as much as possible out of Czech agriculture. Here too their aim was twofold: On the one hand to obtain as much foodstuffs as possible, and on the other, to carry the process of Germanization as far as possible.

"Farmers were turned out of their farms to make way for German settlers--entire agricultural districts were in this way cleared of Czechs. Agricultural co-operative societies in control of production were transformed into auxiliary organizations and were gradually germanized.

"The looting of property and wealth was followed by the pillaging of products of the soil. Heavy fines and frequently even the death penalty were imposed on Czech peasants for intentional failure to comply with orders regarding production, delivery, and rationing.

"B. Expropriation of banks and their funds.

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