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Refugee’s 13-year fight opens floodgates for Kinder claims

July 31, 2008 23:00

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

2 min read

Dozens of former refugees from Nazi Germany are set to receive improved compensation after a 13-year campaign by a London man.

Hermann Hirschberger, 82, was one of the 10,000 children sent to Britain by their parents on the Kindertransport shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War.

This week his tenacity paid off when Britain said it would remove a legal obstacle which, until now, has prevented many of his fellow-Kinder from getting the full German payments.

Mr Hirschberger, a founder member of Belmont Synagogue in North West London, said: "I started with my MP in 1995 and I went to so many ministers. Nobody wanted to know. It wasn't a matter of cosmic importance, it affects a few hundred refugees - although it was a total injustice."