20 Nov. 95
Socialist Republics, in 19 regions of the Russian Soviet
Federated Socialist Republic, and in Poland, Czechoslovakia,
Yugoslavia Greece, and the Balkans (hereinafter called the
"Eastern Countries").
From the 1st September 1939, when the German Armed Forces invaded
Poland, and from the 22nd June 1941, when they invaded the U.S.S.R.,
the German Government and the German High Command adopted a
systematic policy of murder and ill-treatment of the civilian
populations of and in the Eastern Countries as they were successively
occupied by the German Armed Forces. These murders and ill-treatments
were carried on continuously until the German Armed Forces were
driven out of the said countries.
Such murders and ill-treatments included:
a) Murders and ill-treatments at concentration camps and similar
establishments set up by the Germans in the Eastern Countries and in
Eastern Germany including those set up at Maidanek and Auschwitz.
The said murders and ill-treatments were carried out by divers
means including all those set out above, as follows:
About 1 1/2 million persons were exterminated in Maidanek and
about 4 million persons were exterminated in Auschwitz, among whom
were citizens of Poland, the U.S.S.R., the United States of America,
Great Britain, Czechoslovakia, France, and other countries.
In the Lwow region and in the city of Lwow the Germans
exterminated about 700,000 Soviet people, including 70 persons in the
field of the arts, science, and technology, and also citizens of the
U.S.A., Great Britain, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Holland,
brought to this region from other concentration camps.
In the Jewish ghetto from 7 September 1941 to 6 July 1943 over
133,000 persons were tortured and shot.
Mass shooting of the population occurred in the suburbs of the
city and in the Livenitz forest.
In the Ganov camp 200,000 citizens were exterminated. The most
refined methods of cruelty were employed in this extermination, such
as disembowelling and the freezing of human beings in tubs of water.
Mass shootings took place to the accompaniment of the music of an
orchestra recruited from the persons interned.
Beginning with June 1943 the Germans carried out measures to hide
the evidence of their crimes. They exhumed and burned corpses, and
they crushed the bones with machines and used them for fertilizer.
At the beginning of 1944, in the Ozarichi region of the
Bielorussian S.S.R., before liberation by the Red Army, the Germans
established three concentration camps without shelters, to which they
committed tens of thousands of persons from the neighbouring
territories. They intentionally brought many people to these camps