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German court sets trial for 100-year-old alleged Nazi guard

A 100-year-old alleged former guard at a Nazi concentration camp will stand trial in Germany accused of complicity in 3,518 murders, prosecutors say, the BBC reports.

The unnamed suspect is accused of assisting in the murder of prisoners at the Sachsenhausen camp near Berlin between 1942 and 1945.

His alleged crimes include complicity in executions by firing squad and poisonous gas.

On Monday prosecutors confirmed the man would be fit to stand trial in October.

Prosecutors said the man underwent a medical assessment which, despite his advanced age, deemed him fit to appear in court for two-and-a-half hours per day.

Confirmation of the man’s fitness to stand trial was first reported by German newspaper Welt am Sonntag on Sunday.

The newspaper quoted one lawyer, Thomas Walther, as saying many of the complainants were “just as old as the accused and expect justice to be done”.

German media say the trial is expected to be one of the last concerning crimes committed during the Nazi era. The survivors and perpetrators are now very old.

About 200,000 people were imprisoned at the Sachsenhausen camp between 1936 and 1945.

Political opponents, prisoners of war and persecuted groups were among those detained there by the SS, Nazi Germany’s foremost security agency.

The Sachsenhausen museum says tens of thousands of prisoners died at the camp as a result of hunger, disease, forced labour, extermination operations and other causes.

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