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The list is in newspapers worldwide

Swiss Banks Publish List of Holocaust Victims' Accounts

In an attempt to locate survivors of the Nazi Holocaust or their relatives, the Swiss Bankers' Association has published a list of accounts opened before 1945 but not used since the end of the Second World War.

The list is on the Internet at www.dormantaccounts.ch (The BBC does not endorse external sites). It is being published in newspapers in 28 countries.

The list covers names and details of Swiss bank accounts opened by foreigners before May 9, 1945. In October, a second list will be published of dormant accounts opened by Swiss residents before 1945 who may have acted as proxies to hide the assets of Jews and others threatened by the Nazis.

Bank
By publishing the list, Swiss banks are breaking their tradition of secrecy
Swiss bankers said the total in the accounts was believed to be about 60 million Swiss francs. Last year, the total was put at 43 million Swiss francs.

The announcement follows more than a year of often bitter negotiations between Swiss banks and the World Jewish Congress. The WJC has accused the banks of withholding substantial sums of money left by the victims of the Nazis. Separately, the WJC has also charged that Swiss banks laundered gold looted by the Nazis.

A spokesman for the Swiss Bankers' Association said the list would appear in papers "in countries around the world where there are populations of Jews who may be account holders or their heirs."

Janner
Greville Janner
RealAudio
"Thousands are destitute"
Dur: 17"
It runs typically to three pages in broadsheet newspapers. There are 36 names on the list identified as being from Great Britain.

The publication was welcomed by Greville Janner of the Holocaust Educational Trust, who is a former Labour MP.

"At last the banks are taking appropriate steps to trace the owners of these accounts," Mr Janner said.

He added that if the banks had begun the search immediately after the war, "they would have saved years of suffering for thousands of people. For many, it is now too late."

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