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Ethnic Groups Unite In Call To Deport 'Nazi Enablers'

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  • Ethnic Groups Unite In Call To Deport 'Nazi Enablers'

    ETHNIC GROUPS UNITE IN CALL TO DEPORT 'NAZI ENABLERS'
    By Diane Koven

    Canadian Jewish News, Canada
    Feb 7 2007

    OTTAWA -Frustration with Canada's lack of action in dealing with aging
    war criminals living in this country brought together representatives
    from several ethnic communities last week to press the federal
    government to have them deported.

    Canadian Jewish Congress was joined Jan. 30 in Ottawa by members of the
    Armenian, Roma and Rwandan communities, representing peoples who have
    been the victims of genocide, in calling on the federal government to
    act before "time and natural death" renders action impossible. (The
    Darfur Association of Canada also signed off on the effort, but its
    representative was unable to attend the joint press conference).

    Meeting reporters three days after International Holocaust Remembrance
    Day, established by the United Nations General Assembly in 2006 as
    Jan. 27 (the anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau
    death camp), the groups decried the fact that genocide is still
    happening around the world, and they noted that Canada continues to
    be a safe haven for people who have committed crimes against humanity.

    In their various remarks, they highlighted the cases of six suspected
    war criminals who are still living in Canada despite being found to
    have acted as Nazi enablers by Canadian courts.

    Helmut Oberlander, Vladimir Katriuk, Wasyl Odynsky, Jacob Fast,
    Jura Skomatchuk and Josef Furman - whose alleged activities range
    from being an SS guard to involvement with an elite killing unit -
    all allegedly entered Canada by lying about their wartime pasts.

    "It is long past time for them to be removed from this country," said
    Ian Sadinsky of the communications and community relations committee
    of the Jewish Federation of Ottawa. "Canada's failure to do even
    this small action is an insult not only to the victims of Nazism,
    but also to the many other communities who have known the terror of
    homicidal hatred.

    "Canada should offer no haven for the enablers of genocide. Killing
    machines depend not only on the hands that guide them, but also on
    the cogs that move and mesh and yield death as their product."

    Bernie Farber, CEO of Canadian Jewish Congress, said that "only a
    handful of Nazi enablers remain in this country. These are individuals
    like the collaborators Vladimir Katriuk and Jacob Fast or the labour
    camp guards Wasyl Odynsky, Josef Furman and Jura Skomatchuk. They are
    the men without whom the Nazis could not have done their bloody work.

    "And when they came to Canada to start new lives, they lied about
    their war-time activities in order to gain the precious privilege of
    Canadian citizenship."

    Farber said that the "need for urgency on the part of the government
    of Canada is nowhere clearer than in the case of Helmut Oberlander.

    Here you have an individual who was a translator for a mobile killing
    unit responsible for the murder of thousands of Jews. He has lived
    in this country for more than 50 years. His continued residency in
    Canada is shameful."

    Oberlander's case, as well as those of the other five, "require only
    political will to be resolved," said Leo Adler, director of national
    affairs for the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust
    Studies. "They dishonour the privilege of Canadian citizenship."

    Jean-Paul Nyilinkwaya, a spokesperson for PAGE-Rwanda, said,
    "We are also here because we have a debt of gratitude towards the
    Canadian Jewish Congress and other advocacy groups, because they
    started this battle for justice before the genocide happened in
    Rwanda. It is because of their groundbreaking work that when we first
    began noticing the presence [in Canada] of Rwandans suspected to be
    genocide perpetrators around 1996, that there was a war crimes unit
    at the RCMP to receive our complaints."

    Aris Babikian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee
    of Canada, said that "Armenians all over the world believe in
    accountability and responsibility. The punishment of the guilty is
    imperative, because it will help the civil society of the perpetrator
    to atone for the crimes of its leaders and to reconcile with the
    victim nation. As we have seen, without recognition of the crime and
    punishment of the guilty, there can be no reconciliation."

    Adler added that it's "time for Canada to send those who lied about
    their roles with the Nazis back to where they belong."

    Miloslav Slavchev spoke on behalf of the Roma Community Centre. Also
    in attendance was Liberal MP Susan Kadis.

    http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.asp?id=1 1138
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