Thirty-Seventh Day:
Friday, January 18th, 1946
[Page 413] [Page 414]
It is to be noted that Italian military internees must
not be utilised together with the British and American
prisoners of war."
The measures taken until now, in regard to the treatment
of war prisoners and the increasing of their
productivity, have not given the results that had been
hoped for. The offices of the Party, and those of
economy, continually complain of the poor labour output
of all the war prisoners. Therefore the following
directives for prisoners of war are made known, in
agreement with all interested offices of the Party and
State. Accordingly, all guard companies and their
auxiliaries are to be given detailed instructions.
Collaboration with the bearers of sovereignty of the
N.S.D.A.P. The co-operation of all officers in charge of
war prisoners with the bearers of sovereignty of the
Party must be strengthened to an even greater extent. To
this end the commanders of the war-prisoner camps shall
immediately detail, for all the Kreise in their command,
an energetic officer acquainted with all questions
concerning prisoners of war, to act as liaison officer
to the Kreisleiter. This officer shall have the duty of
treating in closest collaboration with the Kreisleiter,
according to the instructions of the camp commander, all
questions concerning prisoners of war which might become
public knowledge.
The aim of this collaboration should be:
(b)To solve all difficulties quickly and on the spot;
(c)To organise the employment of war prisoners in the
Kreise in such a way that it fulfils the political,
military and economic requirements.
(2) Treatment of the prisoners of war. The treatment of
prisoners of war shall be dictated within limits
compatible with security, with the sole purpose of
increasing, as far as possible, the labour output. In
addition to just treatment, the providing of the
prisoners with the food due to them according to
stipulations, and with proper billets, the supervising
of the labour output is necessary to achieve the highest
possible results.
Available means must be employed with extreme rigour as
regards the lazy and the rebellious."
[Page 415]
The prisoners of war were not fooled; in most cases they
refused to cooperate with this German manoeuvre; some agreed
to do it, but a number of these took advantage of the first
leave granted them because of their change in status, and
fled. The report of the Statistical Institute on Forced
Labour which I submitted to the Tribunal this morning as
Exhibit RF 22, gives in this connection the following
information. I quote it, Page 70 of the French text, Page 70
of the German translation. I shall read the second
paragraph:
The National Socialist authorities systematised their policy
of force from 1942 on by establishing the Bureau of
Compulsory Labour in the different occupied territories.
From the end of 1941 it has been verified, that neither the
recruiting of voluntary workers nor the utilisation of
prisoners, permitted a solution of the problem of labour
required for the war economy. The Germans then decided to
proceed to the forced enrolment of civilian workers. They
decreed a veritable civilian mobilisation, the execution of
which characterises their criminal activity.
I refer to a directive of 29th January, 1942, given by Dr.
Mansfeld under authorisation of the defendant Goering. I
remind the Tribunal that I have filed this document already
as Exhibit RF 26. I read the passage from the document where
I stopped this morning, Page 2, last paragraph of the French
translation, Page 2, last paragraph also of the German
original:
Therefore, I ask you to take immediate measures in your
district to promote the employment of workers in the
German Reich on a voluntary basis. I herewith request
you to prepare for publication, regulations making
possible the forced mobilisation of labour from your
territory for Germany, so that they may be decreed at
once in case recruiting on a voluntary basis remains
without the success necessary to relieve labour
employment in the Reich." [Page 416]
The institution of the office of compulsory labour
represents deliberate violation of international
conventions. The deportation of workers is forbidden by
several contractual regulations which have the value of
positive law. I shall quote, first of all, Article 52 of the
Annex to the Fourth Convention of The Hague. I have already
given a commentary on it to the Tribunal, to demonstrate
that the requisitioning of labour effected by the
authorities of the occupation was illegal.
All the more, the institution of compulsory labour was
prohibited by Article 52, Compulsory labour was imposed upon
foreign workers in the interest of the war economy; it was
carried out in armament factories of National Socialist
Germany; it deprived the occupied territories of labour
necessary for the rational exploitation of their wealth, it
therefore is not within the framework of that labour
requisition which Article 52 of The Hague Convention
authorises.
The prohibition of forced labour is, moreover, affirmed by
another international convention. It is a question of the
Convention of the 25th of September, 1926, on slavery, of
which Germany is a signatory. This treaty makes forced
labour equivalent to slavery, in its Article 5.ask the
Tribunal to refer to it.
Deportation of workers is the object of a formal
prohibition. Forced labour in German war factories was,
therefore, instituted in flagrant violation of International
Law and of all pledges subscribed to by Germany. The
National Socialist authorities transgressed positive
International Law; they likewise violated the rights of
nations.
The latter guarantees individual liberty, on which the
principle of forced recruitment is a characteristic attack.
The violation of treaties and contempt for the rights of
individuals are the tenets of National Socialist doctrine.
Therefore the defendants proceeded not merely to the
mobilisation of foreign workers; they proclaimed the
necessity and the legitimacy of forced labour. I shall,
first of all, indicate to the Tribunal certain declarations
made by the defendants which have the strength of
confessions. I shall thereupon indicate how the occupation
authorities introduced the service of compulsory work in the
different occupied territories. I shall demonstrate,
finally, that the Germans took measures of violent coercion
in an attempt to assure the execution of the civilian
mobilisation, which had been decreed.
The legitimacy of forced enrolment has been upheld by
Hitler. The proof of this can be found in the report of the
Four Year Plan Conference held on the 10th, 11th and 12th of
August, 1942. It is contained in Document R-124, which I
presented this morning as Exhibit RF 30.shall not read it to
the Tribunal, because my American colleague, Mr. Dodd, has
done so during his presentation on forced labour. I recall
that the document to which I refer indicates that the
Fuehrer agreed to exercise all the necessary constraint in
the East as well as in the West, if the question of
recruiting foreign labourers could not be regulated on a
voluntary basis.
The necessity of the utilisation of compulsory labour was
expressed in identical terms by certain of the defendants.
[Page 417]
I should like to remind the Tribunal that in Denmark there
was never any legal regulation for forced labour, and that
this was carried out as a simple de facto measure.
I also wish to remind the Tribunal that the Bureau of Forced
Labour was introduced in a special form in Luxembourg and in
the French departments of Alsace and Lorraine. The
occupation authorities incorporated the citizens of
Luxembourg and the French citizens residing in the
departments of Bas-Rhin, Haut-Rhin and Moselle, in the
Labour Service of the Reich. This incorporation was carried
out by ordinances of Gauleiter Simon and Gauleiter Wagner.
The ordinances constitute an integral part of the
Germanisation plan for territories of Luxembourg, Alsace and
Lorraine. Their consequences surpass those of the measures
of forced enrolment which were taken in other occupied
territories. That is why I refer the Tribunal, on this
point, to the explanation which will be given in the
prosecution brief of M. Edgar Faure.
Two German texts of a general nature serve as a foundation
for the legislation on forced labour in the occupied territories of
Western Europe.
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(Part 8 of 9)
[M. HERZOG continues]
The Italian internees who, when investigated, do not
declare themselves ready to continue the struggle under
German command, are put at the disposal of the General
Plenipotentiary for the Employment of Labour
The prisoners of war offered passive resistance to German
force. The National Socialist authorities intervened again
and again, to attempt to increase their output. I refer to
Document 233-PS, which I file with the Tribunal as Exhibit
RF 53. It is a directive of the O.K.W. of 17th October,
1944. The purpose is to point out to the war prisoner
bureaux, measures capable of increasing the productivity of
the prisoners. I read from the document:
"Subject: Treatment of War Prisoners - Increase in
Production.
I shall stop my quotation here.
The resistance of war prisoners caused the German Labour
Bureaux to use a subterfuge to force them to work. I refer
to the operation called the transformation of war prisoners
into free workers. It consisted in transforming prisoners of
war into so-called free workers, to whom a labour contract
was offered. The operation was perfected by the defendant
Sauckel in the course of one of his trips to Paris on 9th
April, 1943. To Germany it offered the advantage of
permitting the use of transformed prisoners in armament
factories, without directly violating the Geneva Convention.
For the prisoners it presented only a seeming advantage, the
decrease of the surveillance to which they were subject. In
reality the length and the nature of the work imposed upon
them was in no way changed; their housing conditions and the
quality of their rations
(a)To increase the labour output of war prisoners;
The Chancellery of the Party will give the necessary
orders to the Gauleiter and the Kreisleiter.
"The transformation of prisoners into 'free' workers,
which was realised or carried out as the second Sauckel
act, and which, because of this fact, must be counted in
the present list as dating from the 25th of April, 1942,
was decided by Sauckel, in the course of a trip to Paris
on 9th April, 1943, It was to involve, after the
prisoner had signed his contract as a labourer, a leave
to go to France - depending on the return of the men who
had gone on leave before. Two attempts were made to
carry out this plan. On the 24th of April, 1943, out of
1,000 on leave, 43 did not return. In the month of
August following, 2,000 out of 8,000 did not return. A
last appeal directed to them was published in the Press
of 17th August without result. There is no third
experiment, and the transformation in practice limited
itself to the removal of sentinels and of camp guards,
but did not change either the nature or the duration of
the work, or the housing conditions or the rations. On
the other hand, it entailed loss of rights to receive
packages from the International Red Cross and loss of
diplomatic protection for prisoners of war."
The forced utilisation of war prisoners did not permit the
German authorities to solve the labour problem of the war
economy. That is why they applied their policy of force to
the civilian populations of the occupied territories.
"In order to avoid a damaging of the armament industry,
all misgivings must yield to the necessity of filling
in, at any rate, the gaps in the labour employment
caused by extensive drafting into the Wehrmacht. To this
end the forced mobilisation of workers from the occupied
territories must not be neglected, if the voluntary
recruitment remains unsuccessful. The mere factor of a
compulsory mobilisation will, in many cases, make
recruiting easier.
"This dilemma of manpower shortage has led to the idea
of making more thorough use of the manpower reserves in
the territories occupied by us. Here, right thinking and
wrong thinking are mixed up together. I believe that, in
so far as it concerns labour, everything has been done
that could be done; but where this is not yet the case,
it appeared preferable, from the political point of
view, not to have recourse to measures of compulsion,
but rather to aim at order and economic relief. In my
opinion, however, the time has now come to take steps
with remorseless vigour and resolution in Denmark,
Holland, France and Belgium, and also to compel
thousands of idle persons to carry out the fortification
work, which is more important than any other work. The
necessary orders for this have already been given."
The German Labour Service had not waited for the appeal of
General Jodl to decree the mobilisation of civilian foreign
workers. I am going to show the Tribunal how the Bureau of
Compulsory Labour was established and organised in France,
in Norway, in Belgium, and in Holland.