Participants attend a court hearing on a genocide case on the murder of more than 200 disabled children in southern Russia by Nazi Germany during World War II, in the Supreme Court of the Republic of Crimea, in Simferopol, Crimea, Russia. German death squads on October 9-10, 1942, killed 214 disabled foster children who had fled Crimea for the coastal town of Yeysk, according to archival documents declassified by the FSB’s Krasnodar region branch.27.06.2022#8225298
Participants attend a court hearing on a genocide case on the murder of more than 200 disabled children in southern Russia by Nazi Germany during World War II, in the Supreme Court of the Republic of Crimea, in Simferopol, Crimea, Russia. German death squads on October 9-10, 1942, killed 214 disabled foster children who had fled Crimea for the coastal town of Yeysk, according to archival documents declassified by the FSB’s Krasnodar region branch.27.06.2022#8225297
Participants attend a court hearing on a genocide case on the murder of more than 200 disabled children in southern Russia by Nazi Germany during World War II, in the Supreme Court of the Republic of Crimea, in Simferopol, Crimea, Russia. German death squads on October 9-10, 1942, killed 214 disabled foster children who had fled Crimea for the coastal town of Yeysk, according to archival documents declassified by the FSB’s Krasnodar region branch.27.06.2022#8225290
Participants attend a court hearing on a genocide case on the murder of more than 200 disabled children in southern Russia by Nazi Germany during World War II, in the Supreme Court of the Republic of Crimea, in Simferopol, Crimea, Russia. German death squads on October 9-10, 1942, killed 214 disabled foster children who had fled Crimea for the coastal town of Yeysk, according to archival documents declassified by the FSB’s Krasnodar region branch.27.06.2022#8225285
Participants attend a court hearing on a genocide case on the murder of more than 200 disabled children in southern Russia by Nazi Germany during World War II, in the Supreme Court of the Republic of Crimea, in Simferopol, Crimea, Russia. German death squads on October 9-10, 1942, killed 214 disabled foster children who had fled Crimea for the coastal town of Yeysk, according to archival documents declassified by the FSB’s Krasnodar region branch.27.06.2022#8225263