Italian court modifies ex-Nazi’s sentence

Survivors and members of the Jewish community were outraged recently when they heard that Erich Priebke, a former Nazi officer who was convicted of war crimes and has been serving a house arrest life sentence, was given permission to leave each day to work at his attorney’s office.

Priebke has been in prison or house arrest since he was extradited to Italy in 1994 from Argentina. He was convicted of war crimes three years later for his role in the massacre of 335 civilians at the Ardeatine Caves on the outskirts of Rome.

Priebke has admitted shooting two people and helping round up the victims, but has always insisted he was just following orders and should not be held responsible.

The massacre Priebke took part in took place after a partisan attack killed 33 Nazis in Rome.

Martic gets 35 years

Even though the Cambodian genocide tribunal has yet to get the proper rules set, the Yugoslavian War Crimes Tribunal handed down a 35 year prison sentence to Milan Martic, who was responsible for killing hundreds of people in a campaign to ethnically cleanse Croatia. He was also found guilty of ordering the cluster bombing of Zagreb.

Most of the crimes were “committed against elderly people, persons held in detention and civilians. The special vulnerability of these victims adds to the gravity of the crimes,” said presiding judge Bakone Moloto.

Martic stood still and showed no emotion as Moloto read out the verdict and his sentence.

The three-judge U.N. panel said Martic was deeply involved in a criminal plot with other Serb leaders including Slobodan Milosevic, Gen. Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic to carve out an ethnically pure “greater Serbia” as Yugoslavia crumbled that would include about one third of Croatia.

“It is clear that Milan Martic endorsed the goal of creating a unified Serb state,” said Moloto.

Martic turned himself in to UN officials in 2002, when he was charged on 19 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity. He was found guilty of 16.

Congo’s looming genocide

Over the last couple of weeks, tensions in the Northeastern province of the Democratic Republic of Congo have been escalating, as 29 people were clubbed or hacked to death in remote villages of Kivo. The perpetrators are Rwandan Hutus who fled to the Congo after the 1994 genocide.

Even though the Congolese army has been conducting operations to root out the Hutu extremists, they’ve only managed to push them further north where they’ve managed to gain allies and increase their organization.

The United Nations Observer Mission in Congo (MONUC) investigators, trying to reach the affected villages, have been met by stone-throwing crowds. A faction of a Rwandan rebel group, the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), carried out the killings in retaliation over Congolese army operations against them. The faction, known as ‘the Rastas’, vowed to return to punish civilians.

This incident is a picturesque reminder of the 1994 genocide in Rwanda where the extremist Hutu, known as the Interahamwe and former fighters of Rwandan Armed Forces (Ex-FAR) clubbed, macheted and shot to death an estimated 800,000 Tutsis and moderates Hutus in 100 days.

In Congo, the extremists Rwandan Hutus, operating under the umbrella of FDLR, have continued to kill indigenous Congolese civilians, but threats to flush them out have not materialised. Yet FDLR has continued to grow in strength and experience. Conservative estimates by the International Crisis Group has estimated their strength at 8,000 to 10,000. Their dream is to return to Rwanda.

MONUC website has pointed to Walungu, Kanyola, Kyalubeze, Chikamba territory in south Kivu province as being controlled by the Rwandan Hutu extremists.

In North Kivu province, the Hutu extremists are equally active and control villages in Rutshuru territory. They use bases inside Virunga and Maiko national parks to raid neighbouring villages. In these camps, women are trained as soldiers, and children are born and brought up as soldiers.

Ishasha and Nyamirima, along the Uganda borderline, are operation zones for these militias, who are closely associated with the Mai Mai group of Vasaka Sikuli Kakule alias La Fontaine.

All of this fueled the formation of a new anti-Tutsi group known as PAROCO-FAP, who claims that their goals are to reach a solution with the Kigali government. The propaganda and rhetoric of this new Hutu extremist group echoes the messages that launched the Rwandan genocide.

Clearly, greater efforts need to be taken in this region, as the conflict, which has roots in Rwanda, has been spreading from the Congo to Uganda and has the potential to destabilize the entire Central African region. Even if the violence is contained, the increased influence that we’re seeing from the anti-Tutsi groups could easily lead to a spread of violence, and possibly another rolling genocide.

Ukrainian mass grave uncovered

A mass grave was recently unearthed near the southern Ukrainian town of Odessa. The grave contained thousands of Holocaust victims, in a region that is believed to have exterminated an average of 500 people per day.

Efraim Zuroff, director of the Israel office of the Simon Wiesenthal Center, said the finding was no surprise: “It underscores the enormous scope of the plans of annihilation of the Nazis and their collaborators in eastern Europe.”

“The scope is enormous, the number of places where murders were carried out is very large and that is why even now at this point, so late after the events, graves are still being discovered,” he added.

It’s believed that 1.5 million Jews were killed during the Nazi occupation of the Ukraine, leaving behind between 250-350 mass graves.

Two sites mapping genocide

A month or so ago, Rich sent me a link for the US Holocaust Museum’s partnership with Google (entitled: USHMM + Google). I’ve been meaning to add it to the blogroll for weeks now but haven’t gotten around to it.

This morning, I found a link in my Google Alerts for Amnesty International’s newest feature — Eyes On Darfur — which is attempting to provide photographic evidence (largely satellite based) of what’s unfolding on the ground. Since they seem to be fairly complimentary websites, I thought I’d take a moment and plug both at the same time.