in facing up to, and in many cases paying up for,
her Nazi past. Compared to the Japanese, French, Swiss, Swedes and some others, the Germans have not tried to construct a national myth for the years 1939-45 and their actions during that time.
(Indeed, although Denmark saved 7,000 of her Jewish population in the war, twice that number of Danes volunteered to shed their Aryan blood on the Eastern Front for the Fuhrer, many committing
terrible war crimes against civilians in the process.)
Yet it seems that Bavaria, which has historically always been the least de-Nazified part of Germany, is now about to sully the otherwise blameless record of the rest of the Federal Republic by effectively protecting Soren Kam from well-deserved prosecution for his part in individual murder and the Holocaust.
Yes, he's a frail old man, but there's no statute of limitations on murder, and if it had been up to him Adolf Hitler - whom he met - would have ruled Europe until he too was a frail old man, with unimaginable consequences for Western civilisation.

It might well be that it is impossible to prove forensically today in a court of law that Soren Kam actually pulled one of the triggers that killed the campaigning anti-Nazi journalist. All the witnesses are long dead, and he was smart enough not to admit it on camera. But that does not invalidate the extradition proceedings in any way. Why should this man be accorded the luxury of a happy old age, something that his actions over the Jewish register denied those thousands of Danish Jews who did not escape?
Rather, though it sounds harsh to say so, the remainder of Kam's life, be it long or short, should now be spent in that nightmare world of depositions, extradition proceedings, public trial,
cross-examinations, camera lights, huge legal fees and - even if acquitted on lack of evidence - years of debilitating worry and fear. We can be certain that this experience will not constitute a
tithe of what he and his SS colleagues visited upon the genuinely innocent during the Second World War.










