The Hague: Dutch researchers said on Friday they believe they have uncovered a new mass grave at the former Nazi concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen, almost exactly 70 years after it was liberated.


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The mass grave, measuring 16 by 4.0 metres (52 feet by 13 feet) was pinpointed using ex-inmates' testimony and is believed to be the final resting place of Dutch Resistance worker Jan Verschure, Dutch television news programme Nieuwsuur reported.


The grave was tracked by Verschure's grandson Paul, who spoke to survivors of the concentration camp where some 70,000 people perished between 1941-45, located in northern Germany's Lower Saxony region.


"One of them gave me a map on which he marked where my grandfather was buried," Verschure told Nieuwsuur.


The spot is located at the end of the camp's former main road and is today just a grassy field.


There are few signs left of the horror camp, torched by British troops shortly after it was liberated on April 15, 1945 to prevent the spread of deadly diseases such as typhus.


Many of the dead were bulldozed into unmarked mass graves around the camp, with up to 10,000 people believed to have been buried in the area.


Dutch archeologist Ivar Schute, who has done an initial probe said he believed there was indeed a mass grave on the spot.


"We've taken measurements and believe that the ground has been disturbed here. We think this is where the mass grave is," he told Nieuwsuur.


But Jens-Christian Wagner, director of the Bergen-Belsen memorial said further investigation was not possible.


"We have consulted the Jewish community of Lower Saxony and according to religious laws no digging is allowed."


"That's why there's a decision not to start a dig. In any case, the whole camp has been declared a cemetery," he said. (AFP)


 


Bajrang Dal protests exhibition showcasing Pakistani products


Kanpur, Apr 10 (PTI) Several activists of Bajrang Dal went on a rampage, tearing posters of an exhibition showcasing wares from Pakistan and raised slogans against that country in Gumti area here today.


Indo-Pak Trade Fair and Food Festival exhibit began at Kanha Continental hotel here today showcasing 40 stalls by Pakistani traders and 22 by their Indian counterparts.


Around 3.30 PM, around 20 activists reached the venue and started tearing posters of the exhibition. They also broke some flower pots and hurled stones at the hotel, police said.


They were involved in a minor scuffle with the security guards and tried to enter the premises but failed.


Nazirabad police soon reached the spot and deployed personnel around the hotel.


Kanpur SSP Shalabh Kumar said the police are on the lookout for those who created a ruckus while security has been tightened in the exhibition premises. Further investigation is on, he said.