Quando si celebra the terrible tragedy of the Holocaust in Italy is always spoken of Risiera di San Sabba, trying to shift all blame to the Italians and the Fascists. With some very serious omission. In fact the media speak of Trieste Lager never say that those who invented the 'dark place of death was Odilo Lothario Globocnik , born in Trieste in 1904 and later moved to Vienna. SLOVENIAN. Already responsible for the implementation of other concentration camps, such as Treblinka . In addition to being Slovenian, Globocnik smoldering hatred toward non-dormant Fascism el 'Italy, as such joined the Austrian Nazi Party was arrested several times before the' Anschluss nell' Austria del Nazionalcattolicesimo Fascista di Dollfuss , ucciso poi per ordine di Hitler. Come si sa i rapporti tra il Cancelliere di Vienna e l' Italia di Mussolini erano strettissimi, e la NSDAP austriaca era illegale.
Con Globocnik arrivano a Trieste gli uomini del Einsatzkommando Reinhard , ben 92 specialisti tra i quali numerose SS ucraine. Questi gruppi, dipendevano dallo "RSHA", cioè dall'ufficio centrale della polizia di sicurezza del Reich (Reichssicherheitshauptamt) a sua volta dipendente dal Ministero degli Interni alla cui testa era il Reichsfùrher SS e ministro Einrich Himmler. L'Einsatzkommando Reinhard costituisce territorialmente diversi offices marked with the symbol R. The group that operates in Trieste, the symbol R1, what works in Udine marked with the symbol River R2 to R3. The symbol is imprinted on the documents and the cells of the Rice Mill. The first commander of Einsatzkommando in Trieste Christian Wirth, Wirth after the killing of a guerrilla ambush in Erpelle May 26 of '44 he was replaced August Dietrich Allers. The right arm of Allers and commander of the Rice Mill is Joseph Oberhauser, then sentenced to 'life imprisonment. As you can see, all Italians ...
also arrange transfers from San Sabba in Nazi concentration camps was another Slovenian, Raimund Piscanc , which is why in 1946 was condannatoa 20 years' imprisonment by the Assize Court of Extraordinary Trieste.
When the 1 May 1945, Tito occupied Trieste, used the same way the Nazis what remained of the former factory: there locked up hundreds of Italians, who were then sent to concentration camps in Yugoslavia, from which very few did return, or directly thrown into Foibe
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