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Dutch online archive identifies suspected WW2 Nazi collaborators

A Dutch project called ‘War in Court’ digitally released a list of names of nearly half a million suspected wartime Nazi collaborators on Thursday after the expiry of a law that had restricted public access to the archive.

The archive, consisting of 32 million pages, includes about 425,000 mostly Dutch people who were investigated for collaboration with German occupiers during World War Two. The law restricting public access expired on New Year’s Day.

Only a fifth of those listed ever appeared before a court, and most cases concerned lesser offenses such as being a member of the Nationalist Socialist movement.

Although the European Union‘s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) protects personal data, it does not apply to those who have died — the vast majority of those listed in the archive.

Initially, scanned files from the archive were set to be made available online on Thursday, giving users access to dossiers of suspects, which also includes their victims and witnesses.

people walking in the new Holocaust Namenmonument between the red walls of named bricks; free photo Amsterdam by Fons Heijnsbroek, April, 2022 (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Full release postponed

However, following a warning from the Dutch Data Protection Authority, the decision was made last month to postpone the full release and instead publish only the list of names.

No date has been set for publication of those dossiers but people with a research interest – including descendants, journalists and historians – can make a request to consult them at the Dutch National Archives in The Hague.





This article was originally published at www.jpost.com

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