Former Nazi officer allowed to leave house arrest in Italy

A former Nazi officer convicted for his role in a 1944 massacre was allowed by an Italian military court to leave house arrest to work. Families of those murdered, politicians and Jewish groups are outraged.

Since last month, 93-year-old Erich Priebke has been allowed to leave the Rome apartment where he is serving a life sentence to work at his lawyer's studio in the Italian capital, lawyer, Paolo Giachini, said Monday.

Priebke has been in prison or house arrest since he was extradited to Italy in 1994 from Argentina. He was convicted of war crimes three years later for his role in the massacre of 335 civilians at the Ardeatine Caves on the outskirts of Rome.

Priebke has admitted shooting two people and helping round up the victims, but has always insisted he was just following orders and should not be held responsible.

Giachini said Priebke was working as a translator thanks to his knowledge of German, Italian, Spanish and English. Speaking from his studio, the lawyer told The Associated Press by telephone that his client only came to the office "when necessary" and declined to say whether Priebke was there Monday.

Giachini maintained the judges "could not refuse this request" because Italian law affords such benefits to all convicts after 10 years in jail if they have been on good behavior, but news of the ruling created a storm because of the heinous nature of the crime.

Rome Mayor Walter Veltroni expressed solidarity with angered families of those killed in the massacre and Massimo Rendina, the head of a group of former Italian resistance fighters in World War II, told the Corriere della Sera daily that his association and the relatives were considering appealing against the ruling.

The executions at the caves occurred March 24, 1944, 24 hours after a partisan attack in central Rome that killed 33 members of a Nazi military police unit. Nazi forces decided to kill 10 Italians for every slain German, raiding prisons for dozens of political prisoners, taking 75 Jews, and adding common criminals and residents from near the site of the partisan attack.

They rounded up five more men than the 330 they sought and killed them all in the abandoned quarry outside Rome.

"A man of 93 who gets a job at a law firm? It's absurd, it's a way to get around his sentence," Amos Luzzatto, a former head of Italy's Jewish communities, told Corriere. "I hope that Priebke will not take advantage of this to organize an escape."

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Author`s name Angela Antonova
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