The Sun enters the Nazi's lair

 

>From BRIAN FLYNN
in Klagenfurt, Austria 

Published: Today

 

 

I LOOKED into the ice-blue eyes of one of the world’s most wanted Nazis and
was chilled by the piercing stare of a man who has evaded justice for more
than 60 years. 

And yesterday wartime Croatian police chief Milivoj Asner sensationally
declared he is ready to face TRIAL. 

The Sun caught up with the world’s fourth-most hunted Nazi as he mingled
with Euro 2008 football fans in his adopted home town of Klagenfurt,
Austria. 

 

 

We told yesterday how the 95-year-old strolled unaided for hours beside wife
Edeltraut – making a mockery of Austrian officials’ claims that he is too
ill to be extradited to Croatia to face a court for alleged war crimes. 

And he and I locked eyes as he coolly invited me into his smart third-floor
flat, where he has lived comfortably with second wife Edeltraut for four
years.

The stubble-covered cheeks are hollower than in the passport photograph
attached to his Interpol international arrest warrant, and the frame is
thinner. 

But his clear, bright eyes and the unflinching gaze that met my own betrayed
a sharpness and an arrogance that has not deserted him in old age. 

Well-spoken, studiously polite and unruffled despite being confronted
unexpectedly by a foreign reporter, he exuded the confidence of a man who
seemed to believe he was untouchable. 

His drab brown lounge was clean, odourless and sparsely decorated. Books
were piled up and photos of relatives on display. 

But any showing his younger days were noticeably absent.

Asked about his past, Asner – who lives in Austria under an assumed name –
at first insisted I had the wrong address. Yet he finally confessed his
identity when I pointed out our photos matched those of him on record. 

Speaking lucidly and clearly, he then denied he was responsible for any
wartime atrocities in the Croatian town of Pozega, dismissing accusers as
“airheads”. 

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At times, he insisted his memory had failed – making a play of asking his
wife how many children he had. He has three. 

Yet despite this, he was able to clearly remember his own father’s career –
and to detail his own job as a “senior civil servant” amid the 1940s
conflict. 

Told there was an Interpol international arrest warrant out for him citing
genocide, he insisted he knew nothing of it – laughing: “There’s an arrest
warrant to extradite me? Why?” 

But he and Edeltraut ARE clearly aware of the document. She quickly
interjected to explain their lawyer has the details. 

The history books describe how Pozega’s entire Jewish community was wiped
out in World War II – sent to the evil Jasenovac concentration camp where
700,000 were exterminated.

Asner is alleged to have overseen the deportation from Croatia of hundreds
of Jews, Serbs and gypsies to concentration camps – signing the necessary
forms. 

He was indicted in 2005 for crimes committed when he was a Ustashi police
chief under Croatia’s Second World War fascist puppet regime. His Interpol
warrant lists the category of offences as “genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity”. 

And academics have detailed how on Christmas Day 1941 – when they allege
Asner was police chief – 150 Jews were rounded up, robbed and put on cattle
wagons bound for camps. 

Yet despite archive documents pin-pointing his role, he insisted he had
never been a police chief there. And he claimed his signature must be fake.

Astonishingly, Asner also denied ANY Jews were deported to death camps from
his home town. 

Laughing again, he said: “I don’t know of anyone deported from Pozega.
Nobody was murdered. I never heard of one single family murdered in Pozega.”


Sensation ... Sun yesterday

Sensation ... Sun yesterday

Denying he sent anyone to Jasenovac, he said: “That is not the way I was. I
never, never took part in it.” 

Despite Austrian officials ruling out extradition on health grounds, Asner
said he was well enough to face trial. 

He said: “I have a clear conscience – I can appear in front of any court. 

“I would welcome the chance to answer these accusations in a Croatian court.
I don’t have anything to do with it. I did not have enough responsibility to
order deportation.” 

Asner admitted he supported the Ustashi fascists, but claimed he was never a
member. 

He said: “I was not with them but, as a Croatian, I respected that they
restored order. 

“However, I was against the Nazis because I am a democrat.” 

Austria’s Justice Minister Maria Berger was last night under pressure to
review the case and agree extradition after our exposé provoked global
outrage. Officials revealed they may order a new medical examination. 

As I prepared to leave, Asner took me firmly by the arm and invited me to
stay and share a cognac, telling me I was clearly an honourable man.

I declined and shook his offered hand out of politeness (his grip was
surprisingly firm for his age). 

But, as I met those sharp blue eyes again, I felt unable to return his
compliment. 

[EMAIL PROTECTED]  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

 

http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/article1300254.ece

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