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Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Beating a dead horse: U.S. considering even more sanctions against Russia


© Evan Vucci/AP



The United States will be considering further sanctions against Russia in the coming days depending on whether there is progress on the Minsk peace agreements, US Secretary of State John Kerry said.

"The next step, if we take one in the next days, which is under consideration depending on what unfolds, will bring us into synchronization [with the sanctions imposed by the European Union and Canada]. Not only will we come into synchronization, but there will probably be additional sanctions," Kerry said at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Tuesday.


On February 18, Canada's Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced new economic sanctions and travel bans against 37 Russian and Ukrainian individuals as well as economic sanctions against 17 Russian and Ukrainian entities over their alleged role in the escalation of the situation in Ukraine.


The European Union ministers agreed on February 9 to freeze assets of individuals allegedly linked to eastern Ukrainian independence supporters, and ban their entry to the bloc.


Implementation of the new round of sanctions was put on hold because of the Ukraine reconciliation talks in Minsk, Belarus among the leaders of Ukraine, France, Germany and Russia.


During 2014, the United States and its allies imposed several rounds of sanctions targeting Russia's defense, energy and banking sectors, as well as certain individuals, over Moscow's alleged meddling in Ukraine's internal affairs.


Russia has repeatedly denied any involvement in the situation in Ukraine and has stressed that sanctions are counterproductive and hamper efforts to end the Ukrainian conflict.


Gazprom notes Kiev cash-for-gas fail could cost EU its supply

Gazprom Ukraine

© RIA Novosti / Sergey Guneev

Aleksei Miller, Chief Executive Officer, Gazprom



Russia will completely cut Ukraine off gas supplies in two days if Kiev fails to pay for deliveries, which will create transit risks for Europe, Gazprom has said.

Ukraine has not paid for March deliveries and is extracting all it can from the current paid supply, seriously risking an early termination of the advance settlement and a supply cutoff, Gazprom's CEO Alexey Miller told journalists. The prepaid gas volumes now stand at 219 million cubic meters.


"It takes about two days to get payment from Naftogaz deposited to a Gazprom account. That's why a delivery to Ukraine of 114 million cubic meters will lead to a complete termination of Russian gas supplies as early as in two days, which creates serious risks for the transit to Europe," Miller said.


russian gas sales europe

© RT



Earlier this month, Russian Energy Minister Aleksandr Novak estimated Ukraine's debt to Russian energy giant Gazprom at $2.3 billion.

In the end of 2014, Kiev's massive gas debt that stood above $5 billion, forced Moscow to suspend gas deliveries to Ukraine for nearly six months. On December 9, Russia resumed its supplies under the so-called winter package deal, which expires on April 1, 2015.




Naftogaz refusal


Naftogaz said it would not make advance payments for Russian gas without knowing Gazprom will implement its side of the contract, and the EU - brokered 'winter plan.'


"Europe currently is the main source of gas supplied to Ukraine, that's why the flawless implementation of our liabilities to transport gas to the EU is our major strategy," the head of Naftogaz, Andrey Kobolev said.


On Monday, Ukrainian state energy company Naftogaz accused Gazprom of failing to deliver gas that Kiev had paid for in advance. Naftogaz says Russia has broken an agreement to deliver 114 million of cubic meters of natural gas to Ukraine by delivering only 47 million cubic meters.


During a meeting with President Vladimir Putin on February 20, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev expressed concern about an increase in daily applications by Ukraine for the supply of gas, TASS reports.


He noted that "Ukraine's consumers have requested a larger supply; the volume has increased by 2.5 times. This means that the prepaid volumes left are enough for no more than two to three days."


Last week, Medvedev ordered the energy minister and the head of Gazprom to prepare proposals on fuel deliveries to the self-proclaimed Republics of Donetsk and Lugansk (DPR and LPR) after Kiev had cut off the delivery pipeline into the southeastern regions. Ukraine's Naftogaz said it had halted gas supplies to eastern regions due to broken pipelines.


Prime Minister Arseny Yatsenyuk said earlier that Ukraine was looking forward to increasing its domestic oil and gas exploration and more supplies from Europe allowing it to completely cut imports of Russian gas.


Supreme Court ruling further erodes 4th amendment - FISA warrants to remain secret


© U.S. Marshal's Office

Adel Daoud



Defense attorneys for the Chicago teen arrested for terrorism in a 2012 sting will be not have access to government surveillance documents, the Supreme Court ruled Monday, upholding a lower court's decision without comment.

Lawyers for Adel Daoud requested access to the surveillance application that prosecutors submitted to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court to show that the teenager was targeted by an FBI-orchestrated sting because of computer searches related to a term paper. Last January, US District Judge Sharon Johnson Coleman ruled that for the first time such access ought to be granted. After the 7th Circuit Court overturned the ruling, Daoud's lawyers appealed to the Supreme Court.


"Without access to FISA materials, it is virtually impossible for defendants to challenge the lawfulness of the government's surveillance of them," Daoud's appeal said.


Daoud, a US citizen of Egyptian origin, was arrested in September 2012 during a FBI sting operation. According to the federal prosecutors, he was contacted by undercover FBI agents posing as terrorists in May that year, and discussed a plot to kill a large number of Americans.


The government claims Daoud picked out the target - a popular Chicago bar - while the undercover agents suggested and provided the means of carrying out the attack. The 18-year-old was arrested as he was allegedly pressing the button on a fake detonator, intending to blow up the bar.


"The explosives that Daoud allegedly attempted to detonate posed no threat to the public...They were inert and had been supplied by undercover law enforcement personnel," the US Attorney's Office in Northern District of Illinois said in a statement following the arrest.


Daoud's defense has argued entrapment, alleging that the FBI targeted their client due to internet searches involving Osama bin Laden related to a high-school term paper. Defense lawyers in a number of other terrorism cases have pointed out that undercover FBI agents not only provided the means, but also incited the suspects to acts of terrorism.



Good breakdown of important yet depressing 7th Cir. ruling further eroding 4th amend rights in nat'l security cases: http://bit.ly/1w9PYKu


— Laura Pitter (@Laurapitter) February 24, 2015




Here's link to #Daoud request 4 US Supreme Court 2 hear on secret #FISA court issue (crt today rejected that request) http://bit.ly/1w9PYKy


— Michael Tarm (@mtarm) February 23, 2015



A Human Rights Watch report from July 2014 criticized government agents targeting "vulnerable individuals... including people with intellectual and mental disabilities." The report quotes Mona Daoud, who described her son as "not the person with a complete mind." [PDF]

Since Congress created the FISA in 1978, no defense attorney has ever been granted access to its warrant applications.


Alaska becomes 3rd state to legalize marijuana, DC will soon be 4th


© Reuters/Alessandro Bianchi



Alaska has joined Colorado and Washington in legalizing recreational marijuana, and the District of Columbia will follow suit on Thursday this week.

The new laws allow adults over 21 to consume small quantities of home-grown pot in private, though sales remain illegal.




Ballot initiatives legalizing personal marijuana consumption were approved by voters in Alaska, Oregon, and Washington, DC last November. Alaska's law went into effect on Tuesday, while Oregon's Measure 91 is scheduled to take effect in July this year.

Initiative 71 legalizing the private consumption of marijuana in DC will take effect later this week on Thursday, according to a statement released by Mayor Muriel Bowser [PDF].


According to the announcement by Mayor Bowser, adults aged 21 and older will be able to lawfully possess up to two ounces of marijuana and use it on private property. They will also be allowed to transfer up to one ounce of marijuana to another person, "as long as no money, goods or services are exchanged and the recipient is 21 years of age or older," and grow upwards of six plants a piece.




Bowser has described the principle as "home grown, home use." Anything else remains illegal, including "selling any amount of marijuana, impaired driving, and consuming any amount of marijuana in public."

"D.C. residents spoke loud and clear" on Initiative 71, says @MayorBowser. Pot legalization becomes law on Thursday at 12:01 a.m.


— Martin Austermuhle (@maustermuhle) February 24, 2015



Alaska law makes it legal to possess, consume, or share up to one ounce of marijuana with adults over the age of 21. Growing marijuana is also legal, but limited to a maximum of six plants. Buying, selling and even bartering marijuana remains against the law, however. The state is still working out regulations for marijuana retailers, with stores expected to be licensed and operational by next year.

The use of marijuana for medicinal purposes has been legalized in 23 states and the District, with laws in several more states pending. Recent legalization of recreational use, however, appears to be signaling a broader national trend. And while Colorado, Oregon, Washington and the District of Columbia are "blue" states that predominantly vote Democratic, Alaska is the first Republican-leaning "red" state to "go green."


Republican members of Congress have tried to prevent the District from putting the ballot initiative into practice. However, the White House cleared the path to marijuana legalization by specifying that no "federal" funds could be used to implement Initiative 71, allowing the District to use its own revenue instead.


The legalization of marijuana in Alaska has worried some Native communities, which are already dealing with high rates of substance abuse. However, legalization activists have cited the disproportionate amount of black Americans imprisoned for marijuana possession as reason enough for limited decriminalization of pot.


Some things Greece must remember about US foreign policy

George Papandreou greek politics



George Papandreou, leader of Greece in 1964





American historian D.F. Fleming, writing of the post-World War II period in his eminent history of the Cold War, stated that "Greece was the first of the liberated states to be openly and forcibly compelled to accept the political system of the occupying Great Power. It was Churchill who acted first and Stalin who followed his example, in Bulgaria and then in Rumania, though with less bloodshed."

The British intervened in Greece while World War II was still raging. His Majesty's Army waged war against ELAS, the left-wing guerrillas who had played a major role in forcing the Nazi occupiers to flee. Shortly after the war ended, the United States joined the Brits in this great anti-communist crusade, intervening in what was now a civil war, taking the side of the neo-fascists against the Greek left. The neo-fascists won and instituted a highly brutal regime, for which the CIA created a suitably repressive internal security agency (KYP in Greek).


In 1964, the liberal George Papandreou came to power, but in April 1967 a military coup took place, just before elections which appeared certain to bring Papandreou back as prime minister. The coup had been a joint effort of the Royal Court, the Greek military, the KYP, the CIA, and the American military stationed in Greece, and was followed immediately by the traditional martial law, censorship, arrests, beatings, and killings, the victims totaling some 8,000 in the first month. This was accompanied by the equally traditional declaration that this was all being done to save the nation from a "communist takeover". Torture, inflicted in the most gruesome of ways, often with equipment supplied by the United States, became routine.


George Papandreou was not any kind of radical. He was a liberal anti-communist type. But his son Andreas, the heir-apparent, while only a little to the left of his father, had not disguised his wish to take Greece out of the Cold War, and had questioned remaining in NATO, or at least as a satellite of the United States.


Andreas Papandreou greek politics



September 3rd 1974: Andreas Papandreou flaunting the famous "Third of September Manifesto".



Andreas Papandreou was arrested at the time of the coup and held in prison for eight months. Shortly after his release, he and his wife Margaret visited the American ambassador, Phillips Talbot, in Athens. Papandreou later related the following:

I asked Talbot whether America could have intervened the night of the coup, to prevent the death of democracy in Greece. He denied that they could have done anything about it. Then Margaret asked a critical question: What if the coup had been a Communist or a Leftist coup? Talbot answered without hesitation. Then, of course, they would have intervened, and they would have crushed the coup. 1



Another charming chapter in US-Greek relations occurred in 2001, when Goldman Sachs, the Wall Street Goliath Lowlife, secretly helped Greece keep billions of dollars of debt off their balance sheet through the use of complex financial instruments like credit default swaps. This allowed Greece to meet the baseline requirements to enter the Eurozone in the first place. But it also helped create a debt bubble that would later explode and bring about the current economic crisis that's drowning the entire continent. Goldman Sachs, however, using its insider knowledge of its Greek client, protected itself from this debt bubble by betting against Greek bonds, expecting that they would eventually fail. 2
Syriza

© Reuters

The head of leftist Syriza party Alexis Tsipras speaks to supporters after winning the elections in Athens()



Will the United States, Germany, the rest of the European Union, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund - collectively constituting the International Mafia - allow the new Greek leaders of the Syriza party to dictate the conditions of Greece's rescue and salvation? The answer at the moment is a decided "No". The fact that Syriza leaders, for some time, have made no secret of their affinity for Russia is reason enough to seal their fate. They should have known how the Cold War works.

I believe Syriza is sincere, and I'm rooting for them, but they may have overestimated their own strength, while forgetting how the Mafia came to occupy its position; it didn't derive from a lot of compromise with left-wing upstarts. Greece may have no choice, eventually, but to default on its debts and leave the Eurozone. The hunger and unemployment of the Greek people may leave them no alternative.


The Twilight Zone of the US State Department


"You are traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land whose boundaries are that of imagination. Your next stop ... the Twilight Zone." (American Television series, 1959-1965)


State Department Daily Press Briefing, February 13, 2015. Department Spokesperson Jen Psaki, questioned by Matthew Lee of The Associated Press.3



Lee: President Maduro [of Venezuela] last night went on the air and said that they had arrested multiple people who were allegedly behind a coup that was backed by the United States. What is your response?


Psaki: These latest accusations, like all previous such accusations, are ludicrous. As a matter of longstanding policy, the United States does not support political transitions by non-constitutional means. Political transitions must be democratic, constitutional, peaceful, and legal. We have seen many times that the Venezuelan Government tries to distract from its own actions by blaming the United States or other members of the international community for events inside Venezuela. These efforts reflect a lack of seriousness on the part of the Venezuelan Government to deal with the grave situation it faces.




Lee: Sorry. The US has - whoa, whoa, whoa - the US has a longstanding practice of not promoting - What did you say? How longstanding is that? I would - in particular in South and Latin America, that is not a longstanding practice.

Psaki: Well, my point here, Matt, without getting into history -


Lee: Not in this case.


Psaki: - is that we do not support, we have no involvement with, and these are ludicrous accusations.


Lee: In this specific case.


Psaki: Correct.


Lee: But if you go back not that long ago, during your lifetime, even - (laughter)


Psaki: The last 21 years. (Laughter.)


Lee: Well done. Touché. But I mean, does "longstanding" mean 10 years in this case? I mean, what is -


Psaki: Matt, my intention was to speak to the specific reports.


Lee: I understand, but you said it's a longstanding US practice, and I'm not so sure - it depends on what your definition of "longstanding" is.


Psaki: We will - okay.


Lee: Recently in Kyiv, whatever we say about Ukraine, whatever, the change of government at the beginning of last year was unconstitutional, and you supported it. The constitution was -


Psaki: That is also ludicrous, I would say.


Lee: - not observed.


Psaki: That is not accurate, nor is it with the history of the facts that happened at the time.


Lee: The history of the facts. How was it constitutional?


Psaki: Well, I don't think I need to go through the history here, but since you gave me the opportunity - - as you know, the former leader of Ukraine left of his own accord.



Leaving the Twilight Zone ... The former Ukrainian leader ran for his life from those who had staged the coup, including a mob of vicious US-supported neo-Nazis.

If you know how to contact Ms. Psaki, tell her to have a look at my list of more than 50 governments the United States has attempted to overthrow since the end of the Second World War. None of the attempts were democratic, constitutional, peaceful, or legal; well, a few were non-violent.4


The ideology of the American media is that it believes that it doesn't have any ideology


So NBC's evening news anchor, Brian Williams, has been caught telling untruths about various events in recent years. What could be worse for a reporter? How about not knowing what's going on in the world? In your own country? At your own employer? As a case in point I give you Williams' rival, Scott Pelley, evening news anchor at CBS.


In August 2002, Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tariq Aziz told American newscaster Dan Rather on CBS: "We do not possess any nuclear or biological or chemical weapons." 5


In December, Aziz stated to Ted Koppel on ABC: "The fact is that we don't have weapons of mass destruction. We don't have chemical, biological, or nuclear weaponry." 6


Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein himself told CBS's Rather in February 2003: "These missiles have been destroyed. There are no missiles that are contrary to the prescription of the United Nations [as to range] in Iraq. They are no longer there."7


Moreover, Gen. Hussein Kamel, former head of Iraq's secret weapons program, and a son-in-law of Saddam Hussein, told the UN in 1995 that Iraq had destroyed its banned missiles and chemical and biological weapons soon after the Persian Gulf War of 1991.8


There are yet other examples of Iraqi officials telling the world, before the 2003 American invasion, that the WMD were non-existent.


Enter Scott Pelley. In January 2008, as a CBS reporter, Pelley interviewed FBI agent George Piro, who had interviewed Saddam Hussein before he was executed:



PELLEY: And what did he tell you about how his weapons of mass destruction had been destroyed?


PIRO: He told me that most of the WMD had been destroyed by the U.N. inspectors in the '90s, and those that hadn't been destroyed by the inspectors were unilaterally destroyed by Iraq.


PELLEY: He had ordered them destroyed?


PIRO: Yes.


PELLEY: So why keep the secret? Why put your nation at risk? Why put your own life at risk to maintain this charade?9



For a journalist there might actually be something as bad as not knowing what's going on in his area of news coverage, even on his own station. After Brian Williams' fall from grace, his former boss at NBC, Bob Wright, defended Williams by pointing to his favorable coverage of the military, saying: "He has been the strongest supporter of the military of any of the news players. He never comes back with negative stories, he wouldn't question if we're spending too much." 10

I think it's safe to say that members of the American mainstream media are not embarrassed by such a "compliment".


In his acceptance speech for the 2005 Nobel Prize for Literature, Harold Pinter made the following observation:



Everyone knows what happened in the Soviet Union and throughout Eastern Europe during the post-war period: the systematic brutality, the widespread atrocities, the ruthless suppression of independent thought. All this has been fully documented and verified.


But my contention here is that the US crimes in the same period have only been superficially recorded, let alone documented, let alone acknowledged, let alone recognized as crimes at all.


It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while it was happening it wasn't happening. It didn't matter. It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic, constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked about them. You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force for universal good. It's a brilliant, even witty, highly successful act of hypnosis.



Cuba made simple

"The trade embargo can be fully lifted only through legislation - unless Cuba forms a democracy, in which case the president can lift it."11



Aha! So that's the problem, according to a Washington Post columnist - Cuba is not a democracy! That would explain why the United States does not maintain an embargo against Saudi Arabia, Honduras, Guatemala, Egypt and other distinguished pillars of freedom. The mainstream media routinely refer to Cuba as a dictatorship. Why is it not uncommon even for people on the left to do the same? I think that many of the latter do so in the belief that to say otherwise runs the risk of not being taken seriously, largely a vestige of the Cold War when Communists all over the world were ridiculed for blindly following Moscow's party line. But what does Cuba do or lack that makes it a dictatorship?

No "free press"? Apart from the question of how free Western media is, if that's to be the standard, what would happen if Cuba announced that from now on anyone in the country could own any kind of media? How long would it be before CIA money - secret and unlimited CIA money financing all kinds of fronts in Cuba - would own or control almost all the media worth owning or controlling?


Is it "free elections" that Cuba lacks? They regularly have elections at municipal, regional and national levels. (They do not have direct election of the president, but neither do Germany or the United Kingdom and many other countries). Money plays virtually no role in these elections; neither does party politics, including the Communist Party, since candidates run as individuals. Again, what is the standard by which Cuban elections are to be judged? Is it that they don't have the Koch Brothers to pour in a billion dollars? Most Americans, if they gave it any thought, might find it difficult to even imagine what a free and democratic election, without great concentrations of corporate money, would look like, or how it would operate. Would Ralph Nader finally be able to get on all 50 state ballots, take part in national television debates, and be able to match the two monopoly parties in media advertising? If that were the case, I think he'd probably win; which is why it's not the case.


Or perhaps what Cuba lacks is our marvelous "electoral college" system, where the presidential candidate with the most votes is not necessarily the winner. If we really think this system is a good example of democracy why don't we use it for local and state elections as well?


Is Cuba not a democracy because it arrests dissidents? Many thousands of anti-war and other protesters have been arrested in the United States in recent years, as in every period in American history. During the Occupy Movement two years ago more than 7,000 people were arrested, many beaten by police and mistreated while in custody.12 And remember: The United States is to the Cuban government like al Qaeda is to Washington, only much more powerful and much closer; virtually without exception, Cuban dissidents have been financed by and aided in other ways by the United States.


Would Washington ignore a group of Americans receiving funds from al Qaeda and engaging in repeated meetings with known members of that organization? In recent years the United States has arrested a great many people in the US and abroad solely on the basis of alleged ties to al Qaeda, with a lot less evidence to go by than Cuba has had with its dissidents' ties to the United States. Virtually all of Cuba's "political prisoners" are such dissidents. While others may call Cuba's security policies dictatorship, I call it self-defense.


The Ministry of Propaganda has a new Commissar


Last month Andrew Lack became chief executive of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, which oversees US government-supported international news media such as Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the Middle East Broadcasting Networks and Radio Free Asia. In a New York Times interview, Mr. Lack was moved to allow the following to escape his mouth: "We are facing a number of challenges from entities like Russia Today which is out there pushing a point of view, the Islamic State in the Middle East and groups like Boko Haram." 13


So ... this former president of NBC News conflates Russia Today (RT) with the two most despicable groups of "human beings" on the planet. Do mainstream media executives sometimes wonder why so many of their audience has drifted to alternative media, like, for example, RT?


Those of you who have not yet discovered RT, I suggest you go to RT.com to see whether it's available in your city. And there are no commercials.


It should be noted that the Times interviewer, Ron Nixon, expressed no surprise at Lack's remark.


Notes



  1. William Blum, Killing Hope: U.S. Military and C.I.A. Interventions Since World War II, chapters 3 and 35

  2. "Greek Debt Crisis: How Goldman Sachs Helped Greece to Mask its True Debt", Spiegel Online (Germany), February 8, 2010. Google "Goldman Sachs" Greece for other references.

  3. U.S. Department of State Daily Press Briefing, February 13, 2015

  4. Overthrowing other people's governments: The Master List

  5. CBS Evening News, August 20, 2002

  6. ABC Nightline, December 4, 2002

  7. "60 Minutes II", February 26, 2003

  8. Washington Post, March 1, 2003

  9. "60 Minutes", January 27, 2008

  10. Democracy Now!, February 12, 2015, Wright statement made February 10

  11. Al Kamen, Washington Post, February 18, 2015

  12. Huffington Post, May 3, 2012

  13. New York Times, January 21, 2015


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Dangerous sea level rise on U.S. East Coast reported by scientists


© AP Photo/Richard Drew



Sea levels along North America's northeastern coast experienced a record rise from 2009 to 2010, according to a report by a team of scientists in the United States.

From New York to Newfoundland, coastal waters rose by as much as 128 millimeters - more than five inches - over the two-year span, states the report, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Nature Communications.


"The extreme sea level rise event during 2009-10 along the northeast coast of North America is unprecedented during the past century," Professor Jianjun Yin of the University of Arizona told BBC News.


"Statistical analysis indicates that it is a 1-in-850 year event."


The extreme rise caused flooding all along the northeast coast, and as far south as Cape Hatteras off the coast of North Carolina, Phys.org reported.


Researchers say Coastal areas will need to prepare for future short term and extreme sea level events that will result from the drastic rise. Climate models suggest such rises will become more common this century.


"When coastal storms occur, extreme sea levels can lead to elevated storm surge," said Professor Yin.


Scientists at the University of Arizona and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in New Jersey discovered the rise by studying records of tidal levels along the eastern coast of the US and Canada.


They attributed the unusual spike to changes in ocean circulation, as well as factors like alternating wind patterns and rising levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide.


The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) had a 30% decline in strength in 2009-2010. Researchers reported the decline started just two months before the spike in sea level began.


Research at the University of Reading has shown that the AMOC could impact rainfall patterns as far away as Britain and Africa, the BBC reported.


94 year old ex-Nazi sergeant charged with murders from time at Auschwitz


© AP

The main gate of the Auschwitz death camp complex in occupied-Poland. German prosecutors have charged a 94-year-old man with 3,681 counts of accessory to murder on allegations he worked as a sergeant at the camp.



German prosecutors have charged a 94-year-old man with 3,681 counts of accessory to murder on allegations he served in the Nazis' Auschwitz death camp.

Schwerin prosecutors' spokesman Stefan Urbanek said Monday the suspect was an SS sergeant who served as a medic in Auschwitz in an SS hospital. In that role, Urbanek said the man helped the extermination camp function and could thus be charged as an accessory to the 1944 killings.


Urbanek wouldn't release the suspect's name in line with privacy laws.


The man is one of 30 former Auschwitz suspects against whom federal investigators recommended in 2013 that state prosecutors pursue charges under a new precedent in German law.


His attorney, Peter-Michael Diestel, told the Bild newspaper there's no evidence of any "concrete criminal act" by his client.