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Follow-up accountability of Nuremberg trial: fascist soil was completely eradicated

The U.S. military court conducted 177 follow-up trials on 65,438 defendants who held important positions in Nazi Germany's political, economic and military institutions and organizations in Nuremberg, namely:

1 doctor experiment (medical experiment for prisoners of war and prisoners in concentration camps).

The trial of m hill (for marshal e m hill).

Judge trial (for senior judicial officials who used the law to persecute Jews and Nazi opposition).

4 Bohr trial (for H. von Bohr, leader of SS concentration camp management organization).

Frick trial (for President Frick and his Kang Zeen, foreign forced labor was used extensively).

6. Trial of French companies (for the activities of French companies in occupied areas).

7. Hostage-killing trial (for generals who killed hostages in anti-guerrilla warfare in South-Eastern Europe).

Race and Immigration Experiment (SS's Race Plan).

Trial of SS special operations forces (for commanders of Olendorf and other special operations forces).

10 Krupp trial (for Krupp Konzern and his leaders).

1 1 William street trial (for crimes against peace committed by senior officials and ministers of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs).

12 trial of the supreme command of the national defense forces (senior officers of the supreme command). In the subsequent trial, 24 people were sentenced to death (including 12), 35 people were released and the rest were sentenced to fixed-term imprisonment. But by 1956, they were all released.

According to the crime

The Nuremberg trial resulted in the prosecution and conviction of the following four crimes:

(1) Planning, preparing, launching or committing war crimes.

(2) Participating in the implementation of war and planning crimes. Together, these two crimes are called crimes against peace.

(3) War crime (referring to violation of the laws or customs of war).

(4) Crimes against humanity (refers to the slaughter, extermination and slavery of civilians, etc.). The Nuremberg trial laid the foundation for future trials of crimes against peace and marked the great development of international law.