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New evidence of nightmare

There’s also an in-depth feature about Zuroff & Polgar in The Age.

From the Oz:

Two tales from a nightmare
Natasha Robinson
February 17, 2006

THEY live 30 minutes’ drive from one another in suburban Melbourne. One is a Jewish refugee from the nightmare of World War II Hungary, the other a former officer of the regime that tortured her.

The story 82-year-old Susanne Nozick has to tell is the new evidence that could bring 89-year-old Lajos Polgar to a war crimes trial, 61 years after the disgraceful events she describes.

Mrs Nozick was 19 and in hiding at Budapest’s Charity Hospital, in the final months of World War II, when she was detained by soldiers and taken with her mother to the notorious House of Loyalty, the headquarters of the dreaded Hungarian fascist organisation Arrow Cross. There she was forced to watch as her mother was raped and brutally beaten.

News brief · 17 February 2006

Melbourne war crime suspect admits role.

From The Age:

War crime suspect admits to his leading fascist role
Chris Johnston
February 16, 2006

A MELBOURNE man accused of atrocities against Jews in World War II has admitted for the first time that he was a high-ranking official in the notorious Nazi-linked Arrow Cross party.

Lajos Polgar, 89, of Ferntree Gully, has been placed under “suspicion of genocide” by the Hungarian Government over war crimes against Jews. He is also being investigated by the world’s foremost Nazi hunter, the Simon Wiesenthal centre’s Efraim Zuroff, who arrived in Melbourne last night.

Mr Polgar had consistently denied his high rank in Arrow Cross, the feared fascist party that in the final months of the war supervised the passage of 80,000 Hungarian Jews to Auschwitz for Nazi Adolf Eichmann and massacred and tortured Jews in Budapest in 1944 and 1945.

But last night he told The Age: “Oh yes, I was a leader (of the party). Only for two months, in Budapest.”

News brief · 16 February 2006

Australia not pulling its weight

The Australian

Canberra ‘failing’ in hunt for Nazis
Christopher Dore
October 03, 2005

AUSTRALIA has been slammed for failing to track down and prosecute “at least several hundred” Nazi war criminals believed to have found refuge here.

The Simon Wiesenthal Centre, which is dedicated to finding suspected World War II criminals and helping prosecute them, says Australia has failed to do enough and needs to take “additional steps, urgently”.

News brief · 4 October 2005

Last Chances

From the AIJAC Review:

Last Chance for Justice

Beyond the Zentai case

By Leon Kofmansky

Over sixty years after the murder of Jewish teenager Peter Balazs in Budapest, the last of the accused has finally been arrested. If Australian courts find a Hungarian extradition request in order, Perth resident Charles Zentai will stand in the dock, accused of committing the murder along with two accomplices (the other two were brought to justice shortly after the end of World War II). Both the timing and location of Zentai’s arrest - in the world’s most isolated city - is in itself an example of just how expansive and difficult the effort to bring to justice perpetrators of the Holocaust has been.

News brief · 31 August 2005

Australian government slammed over Zentai

One of Australia’s pre-eminent experts on Nazi war criminals has slammed the Federal Government’s foot-dragging over a request by Hungary to extradite Perth retiree Charles Zentai. Zentai, 83, is alleged to have bashed to death a young Jewish man in Budapest in 1944 — a charge he denies.

News brief · 1 June 2005