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Opinion

Time for action on suspected Rwandan war criminals in UK

The parliamentary war crimes group was set up to deal with Nazis, but we have had to revive it to keep Rwanda in focus, write Andrew Mitchell MP and Lord Mendelsohn

April 23, 2021 11:31
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A5APRX Graveyard of the victims of the Rwandan genocide Rwanda
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The journey began in 1986. In October of that year, the Simon Wiesenthal Centre handed the British government a list of 17 alleged Nazi war criminals residing in the UK. It was well known that under the Attlee government the UK absorbed 90,000 Displaced Persons, mainly from Eastern Europe, in the aftermath of the Second World War. In the absence of any serious effort to look into individuals’ wartime past, and in some cases active clandestine collusion to help them settle here, Nazi criminals — and especially those who had been part of the Einsatzgruppen death squads — seeped in among them, believing they would never have to answer for their actions. Indeed, no questions were ever asked.

You would imagine that revelations of the presence of alleged murderers on our shores would have prompted urgent action to bring them to justice and that the idea that Britain was some sort of safe haven for war criminals was an affront to UK values. After all, Britain was the land that stood up to Hitler. Britain had been at the forefront of the Nuremberg prosecutions and proudly championed values of justice and the rule of law.

As the volume of alleged war criminals in the UK multiplied with more names uncovered, surely inaction would not only be deeply immoral but inherently paradoxical? Unfortunately, it was politics and prejudice that intervened.

Stunned by the disclosure, a group of parliamentarians did indeed decide that things needed to change and set up a cross-party group on war crimes. Led by former Home Secretary Merlyn Rees and Greville Janner, it carried the support of politicians of all stripes. Its original purpose was to clarify questions relating to the presence of the suspects as well as the legal options available to bring them to justice. At the time there was no provision under UK law to prosecute non-British citizens (even naturalised ones) accused of war crimes that had been committed elsewhere.