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Auschwitz thieves captured
POLISH police detained five men yesterday for stealing the metal sign that hung over the former Nazi death camp of Auschwitz, and said they were common thieves, not neo-Nazis.
Last Friday's theft triggered widespread outrage, especially from Israel and Jewish groups, amid fears of a political motive. The sign, which carries the German motto "Arbeit macht frei" ("Work makes you free"), is a powerful symbol of the Holocaust committed by the Nazis against the Jews. The police said it had been cut into three pieces.
"None of the five suspects is a member of a neo-Nazi group," said Andrzej Rokita, district police chief in the southern city of Krakow, near Auschwitz. "Their motive was undoubtedly theft. We'll be able to say later whether the crime was ordered or they acted on their own initiative."
Police said the suspects, aged between 20 and 39, had previous convictions for various crimes including robbery and physical assault. One of them ran his own construction firm.
Authorities had made recovering the sign a national priority and the museum that runs Auschwitz offered a reward worth nearly US$40,000. Police said they had received more than 100 calls offering information.
About 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, perished at the death camp during Nazi Germany's occupation of Poland in World War II. Arriving prisoners used to enter via a small iron gate topped by the sign.
More than 200 hectares of the former death camp became a museum after the war ended.
Jewish groups welcomed the news the sign had been recovered.
"The theft of the symbol of Auschwitz was not merely an act of vandalism. It was a crime against mankind and memory," the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants said in a statement. "Punishment should be swiftly meted out to those involved in this assault on history."
Israeli President Shimon Peres had personally appealed to the Polish government to recover the sign.
Last Friday's theft triggered widespread outrage, especially from Israel and Jewish groups, amid fears of a political motive. The sign, which carries the German motto "Arbeit macht frei" ("Work makes you free"), is a powerful symbol of the Holocaust committed by the Nazis against the Jews. The police said it had been cut into three pieces.
"None of the five suspects is a member of a neo-Nazi group," said Andrzej Rokita, district police chief in the southern city of Krakow, near Auschwitz. "Their motive was undoubtedly theft. We'll be able to say later whether the crime was ordered or they acted on their own initiative."
Police said the suspects, aged between 20 and 39, had previous convictions for various crimes including robbery and physical assault. One of them ran his own construction firm.
Authorities had made recovering the sign a national priority and the museum that runs Auschwitz offered a reward worth nearly US$40,000. Police said they had received more than 100 calls offering information.
About 1.5 million people, mostly Jews, perished at the death camp during Nazi Germany's occupation of Poland in World War II. Arriving prisoners used to enter via a small iron gate topped by the sign.
More than 200 hectares of the former death camp became a museum after the war ended.
Jewish groups welcomed the news the sign had been recovered.
"The theft of the symbol of Auschwitz was not merely an act of vandalism. It was a crime against mankind and memory," the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants said in a statement. "Punishment should be swiftly meted out to those involved in this assault on history."
Israeli President Shimon Peres had personally appealed to the Polish government to recover the sign.
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