ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
May 3, 2004 Monday
Soviet prisoners of war filing lawsuit to demand compensations
By Olga Fronina
MOSCOW
Several hundred former Soviet prisoners of war are considering a
class suit to Germany's Supreme Administrative Court with a demand to
make them eligible for the compensations that the German government
pays to the former forced toilers of the Third Reich, a lawyer
representing the POWs said.
"The class suit will be filed in May on behalf of several hundred
POWs now living in Armenia," said Stefan Taschian, the lawyer.
In April he completed work in Moscow archives and is now in getting
familiarized with the documents on his clients in Yerevan.
The lawsuit will be addressed to the German Finance Ministry and the
fund that pays out money to the victims of Nazism.
This is not the first time that Taschian is handling such suits. Last
year, he represented the interests of two former POWs trying to get
the compensations as other categories of Nazi convicts in a Berlin
court.
The lawsuit was rejected, however, with the judges saying German
legislation did not regard the former POWs as a category eligible for
compensations.
German officials insist that all the issues pertaining to the POWs
were settled back in 1953 by the London agreement on debts and by
agreements on reparations.
These documents stipulate that only the POWs, whom the Nazis
transferred to the category of civilian convicts, can aspire to
reparations.
Taschian said in this context that a group of Italians, who had filed
a suit simultaneously with his clients, had won a verdict for
compensation.
TASS
May 3, 2004 Monday
Soviet prisoners of war filing lawsuit to demand compensations
By Olga Fronina
MOSCOW
Several hundred former Soviet prisoners of war are considering a
class suit to Germany's Supreme Administrative Court with a demand to
make them eligible for the compensations that the German government
pays to the former forced toilers of the Third Reich, a lawyer
representing the POWs said.
"The class suit will be filed in May on behalf of several hundred
POWs now living in Armenia," said Stefan Taschian, the lawyer.
In April he completed work in Moscow archives and is now in getting
familiarized with the documents on his clients in Yerevan.
The lawsuit will be addressed to the German Finance Ministry and the
fund that pays out money to the victims of Nazism.
This is not the first time that Taschian is handling such suits. Last
year, he represented the interests of two former POWs trying to get
the compensations as other categories of Nazi convicts in a Berlin
court.
The lawsuit was rejected, however, with the judges saying German
legislation did not regard the former POWs as a category eligible for
compensations.
German officials insist that all the issues pertaining to the POWs
were settled back in 1953 by the London agreement on debts and by
agreements on reparations.
These documents stipulate that only the POWs, whom the Nazis
transferred to the category of civilian convicts, can aspire to
reparations.
Taschian said in this context that a group of Italians, who had filed
a suit simultaneously with his clients, had won a verdict for
compensation.