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Gypsies to sue IBM on 'Nazi link'
A Swiss court has cleared the way for Gypsy campaigners to sue IBM over allegations that the computer company's expertise helped the Nazis commit mass murder more efficiently, the plaintiffs' lawyer said Tuesday.
The Gypsies filed the lawsuit in Geneva because IBM's wartime European headquarters was in the city. They claim the office was the information technology multinational's hub for trade with the Nazis. "IBM's complicity through material or intellectual assistance to the criminal acts of the Nazis during World War II via its Geneva office cannot be ruled out," said the appeals court ruling. It cited "a significant body of evidence indicating that the Geneva office could have been aware that it was assisting these acts." In June 2003, the lower court said IBM only had an "antenna" in the Swiss city, but the Geneva official archives contain documents showing that in 1936 IBM opened an office under the name "International Business Machines Corporation New York, European Headquarters." No immediate reaction to the ruling was available from IBM's Geneva lawyers, who have previously referred requests for comment to the company's U.S. headquarters. The news of the ruling came before business hours at the IBM's New York base. The company has said its German subsidiary, Deutsche Hollerith Maschinen GmbH -- or Dehomag -- was taken over by the Nazis before World War II, and it had no control over operations there or how IBM machines were used by the Nazis. Sambuc maintains that the company's Geneva office continued to coordinate Europe-wide trade with the Nazis, acting on clear instructions from world headquarters in New York.
Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler meets IBM founder Thomas J. Watson in 1937. The campaigners began planning the lawsuit after U.S. author Edwin Black claimed in a book published in February 2001 that IBM punch-card machines enabled the Nazis to make their killing operations more efficient. Black said the punch-card machines were used to codify information about people sent to concentration camps. The number 12 represented a Gypsy inmate, while Jews were recorded with the number 8. The code D4 meant a prisoner had been killed. The Nazis are believed to have killed around 600,000 Gypsies along with 6 million Jews. Although Gypsy groups say the number of Gypsies killed could have been as high as 1.5 million. "It does not appear inconsistent to conclude that the respondent (IBM) facilitated the task of the Nazis in their committing of crimes against humanity -- acts which were counted and codified by IBM machines," said the court ruling. IBM's German division has paid into Germany's government-industry initiative to compensate people forced to work for the Nazis during the war. In April 2001, a class action lawsuit against IBM in New York was dropped after lawyers said they feared it would slow down payments from the German Holocaust fund. German companies had sought freedom from legal actions before committing to the fund. The Geneva case is the first Holocaust-related action against IBM in Europe, said Sambuc. A city court will likely hear the lawsuit in the fall, unless IBM lodges an appeal at the Federal Tribunal, Switzerland's supreme court. |
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