Red Cross to hand WWII missing persons data to Germany
GENEVA - Agence France-Presse
Hürriyet Photo
The Red
Cross said Thursday it would hand over to German authorities a huge
archive of people who were persecuted by the Nazis and who went missing
amid the chaos of World War II.
The massive International
Tracing Service (ITS) archive created in 1943 to provide answers for
millions of families seeking relatives lost during the war would as of
January 1 be managed by Germany, the International Committee of the Red
Cross said in a statement.
The agency said it had decided to let go of the archive because the ITS mission had extended beyond purely humanitarian work.
The
archives "reflect human beings and the unthinkable suffering of so many
millions during the Second World War and beyond," ICRC chief Peter
Maurer said.
The ITS archive houses over 50 million card files
relating to more than 17.5 million civilians persecuted by the Nazis,
ICRC said, pointing out that it covered civilians detained in Nazi
concentration or labour camps and others forced to flee their homes
because of the war.
Despite the handover of the archive, which
has been in Red Cross hands for more than half a century, the
organisation said it would continue to support the database and its new
administrator the German Federal Archive.
"The ICRC will
continue to provide its technical expertise, helping the ITS serve the
victims of Nazi persecution and their families," it said.
"The
ICRC is handing over management of the ITS, but we're not leaving it,"
Maurer said, stressing that the Red Cross's central tracing agency in
Geneva and other national Red Cross and Red Crescent societies around
the world would provide back-up support to the German authorities.