Sant'Anna di Stazzema

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Sant'Anna di Stazzema is a village in Italian Tuscany, now part of the comune of Stazzema (province of Lucca). It was the site of a World War II massacre.

[edit] Massacre

On August 12, 1944, SS of the 16th SS-Panzer-Aufklärungsabteilung of 16. SS-Panzergrenadier-Division Reichsführer SS, commanded by Walter Reder, rounded up 560 villagers and refugees - men, women, children, shooting and then burning them. The village was never rebuilt, and stands as a memorial.

In Italy, the massacre was not publicly known until 1994, when nearly 700 reports about it were accidentally found in a metal cabinet (named "cupboard of shame" by Italian media) in the basement of the Rome military court.

[edit] Trial

Until 2004, no one had ever been prosecuted for the massacre. In July 2004, a trial started before a military court in La Spezia against 10 former SS officers living in Germany. On June 22, 2005 the ten former Nazi officers were found guilty of the massacre by an Italian military court and sentenced in absence to life imprisonment.

The convicts are:

  • Karl Gropler
  • Georg Rauch
  • Gerard Sommer
  • Alfred Schoneberg
  • Ludwig Heinrich Sonntag
  • Alfred Concina
  • Horst Richter
  • Werner Bruss
  • Heinrich Schendel
  • Ludwig Goering

There are several other trials because of German war crimes in Italia after 2002. So e.g. Max Josef Milde was conviceted for the massacre in Civitella on October 10, 2006.

[edit] External links

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