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Justice Delayed: How Britain Became A Refuge For Nazi War Crimina

David Cesarani


Cesarani describes how the immigration policy of Clement Attlee's post-war government actually favoured Eastern Europeans over non-whites and Jewish Holocaust survivors. Despite protests from MPs Dick Crossman and Tom Driberg former members of the Waffen-SS and Nazi police units made new lives in Britain. British intelligence recruited agents among them and sent many into the Eastern Bloc where they were betrayed by Kim Philby.
Only in 1986 did the Simon Wiesenthal Centre provide evidence that could not be ignored. The House of Lords defied the Commons in a last ditch effort to stop legislation which would permit war crime trials in Britain but on May 10 1991 the war crimes bill was signed by The Queen.
This authoritative book written by a former researcher for the All-Party Parliamentary War Crimes Group brings together the whole extraordinary story exposing the use made of Nazi collaborators by British intelligence the post-war 'cover up' and provides in-depth background to the first war crimes trials in Britain for fifty years.

  • Classification : History
  • Pub Date : JAN 1, 2007
  • Imprint : Orion
  • Page Extent : 0
  • Binding : PB
  • ISBN : 9781842121269
  • Price : INR 1,050
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David Cesarani


David Cesarani is Director of Studies at the Institute of Contemporary History and Wiener Library. He has written on Anglo-Jewish history and the history of Zionism and has written the official history of the Jewish Chronicle newspaper. From 1987-1991 he was consultant to the All-Party Parliamentary War Crimes Group and was Principal Researcher of its 'Report on the Entry on Nazi War Criminals and Collaborators in the UK 1945-50.

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