Some looked out of curiosity, others out of concern.
The names of some 425,000 suspected Dutch collaborators went online 80 years after the Holocaust ended, making them ...
The archive contains the names of those investigated as part of a special legal system at the end of World War II in the Netherlands ...
Nearly 80 years after the end of the Holocaust, the names of suspected Nazi collaborators have been digitized and published ...
Heinrich Himmler and Sepp Dietrich (German military figures during the Nazi regime ... Instead, these detailed records can ...
Which is why Germany's reactions to the decision in The Hague have been mixed ... A short time later, the German government followed this up with a press release in Berlin stating: "The German ...
Eight decades after the defeat of the Nazis, a debate in the Netherlands asks how much of the largest Dutch war archive ...
The German government said the lawsuit was unjustified ... The Central American country had brought the case to the Hague in early March to ask judges to issue emergency measures to stop Berlin ...
The names of around 425,000 people suspected of collaborating with the Nazis during the German occupation of the ... the Dutch National Archives in The Hague. The Huygens Institute, which helped ...