Hungarian Nazi Evades Australia Extradiction
An Australian federal court has ruled not to extradite suspected war criminal Charles Zentai to his native Hungary.
Nazi hunter Efraim Zuroff told JTA that the ruling not to extradite the alleged war criminal to Hungary is “a permanent stain on Australia’s record.”
An Australian government spokesperson said on Wednesday that Zentai, who is accused of murdering a Jew in Budapest in 1944, could not be extradited because back then “the offense of ‘war crime’ did not exist under Hungarian law,” The Australian reported.
Hungary first requested Zentai’s extradition in 2005 for the offense of war crimes. He is accused of fatally assaulting Peter Balazs, 18, in November 1944, for not wearing a yellow Star of David.
He and two fellow soldiers in the Hungarian army were accused of beating Balazs and then tossing his body into the Danube River. Zentai denies the charges.
Zuroff, the New York-born Nazi hunter who tracked Zentai down, said the ruling “means that the Australian effort to bring Holocaust-era war criminals to justice has not had a single success.”
Zuroff said the Australian justices had “ignored numerous international precedents” in which war criminals were extradited to stand trial for genocide, war crimes or crimes against humanity despite the fact that these criminal categories had not existed at the time of the crime.
The Australian court system has reviewed charges against three suspected Holocaust-era war criminals, none of whom were convicted.
The ruling shows that “Australia was the right destination for the numerous Nazi war criminals and collaborators, none of whom was ever successfully prosecuted or extradited, despite their heinous crimes,” said Zuroff, who heads the Simon Wiesenthal Center’s Israel office. “In that respect, Australia has the worst record among the major Anglo-Saxon democracies, all of whom allowed the entry of numerous Nazi helpers after World War II.”
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