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Call for public inquiry into claims a Nazi war criminal was recruited as British spy

Late Shropshire pensioner Stanislaw Chrzanowski said to have been investigated by German police over wartime murders in Belarus

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BERLIN - 1936: General view of the Brandenburge Gate as Germany hosts the XI Olympic Games in August of 1936 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Getty Images)

The Board of Deputies has called for a public inquiry into allegations a suspected Nazi war criminal may have been recruited by British intelligence.
 
BBC News previously reported that German prosecutors had investigated Shropshire pensioner Stanislaw Chrzanowski before his death in 2017 over civilian murders in Belarus during the war.
 
Mr Chrzanowski’s late stepson John Kingston, who died in 2018, had reported him to the Metropolitan Police in the 1990s but the case was dropped due to insufficient evidence, according to the report.  
 
Now another BBC News investigation - broadcast on Radio 4 on Tuesday - claims to have uncovered evidence Mr Chrzanowski may have been a Cold War spy.
 
It draws from recordings of private conversations Mr Kingston had with his stepfather and contains allegations British intelligence destroyed files in the 1980s and 1990s likely to include information about any Nazi collaborators recruited by UK intelligence.
 
Board of Deputies president Marie van der Zyl described the investigation as “shocking” and called for a public inquiry.
 
She said: “Radio 4’s programme also alleges that 30 years ago the British Intelligence services attempted to cover up their actions, destroying information and thereby protecting Nazis who were still alive and living in Britain three decades ago. That would be monstrous – and one must assume illegal – behaviour. The British public deserve to know the full facts behind this.”
 
Ticket collector Anthony Sawoniuk, who died in 2005, is the only Nazi collaborator to have been convicted of war crimes in Britain.
 
A Holocaust Educational Trust spokesperson said “it had long been known” perpetrators settled in the UK after the war and “long suspected” some were recruited by the intelligence services.
 
“We are proud of the role which we and others played in bringing about the War Crimes Act of 1991, which finally offered the hope to survivors of the Holocaust that the killers could be brought to justice.
 
“Of a number of suspected cases, only one was successfully prosecuted under the Act. If there is any evidence to suggest that there was the deliberate frustration of the War Crimes Act or that files were destroyed, that must be investigated,” HET said.

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