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  1. Fritz Suhren (Varel, Reino de Sajonia, Alemania; 10 de junio de 1908 – 12 de junio de 1950). Fue un Oficial de la SS nazi, participante activo del Holocausto judío durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Fritz_SuhrenFritz Suhren - Wikipedia

    Fritz Suhren (10 June 1908 – 12 June 1950) was a Nazi German SS officer and Nazi concentration camp commandant. In 1950 he was tried for his role in The Holocaust by a French military court and found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity, and executed.

  3. SS-Hauptsturmführer Fritz Suhren from August 1942 until the camp's liberation at the end of April 1945; The other male officers were : Paul Borchert, chief of political section. Edmund Bräuning , Schutzhaftlagerführer, assistant to Fritz Suhren. Hans Pflaum , chief of labor section.

  4. www.wikiwand.com › es › Fritz_SuhrenFritz Suhren - Wikiwand

    De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. Fritz Suhren ( Varel, Reino de Sajonia, Alemania; 10 de junio de 1908 – 12 de junio de 1950). Fue un Oficial de la SS nazi, participante activo del Holocausto judío durante la Segunda Guerra Mundial.

  5. Fritz Suhren (* 10. Juni 1908 in Varel; † 12. Juni 1950 bei Sandweier) war ein deutscher SS-Sturmbannführer und Lagerkommandant im KZ Ravensbrück . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Ausbildung und NS-Karriere. 2 KZ Sachsenhausen. 2.1 Mordaktionen. 2.2 Suhrenallee. 2.3 Exekutionsbefehl von Suhren an Naujoks. 3 KZ Ravensbrück. 3.1 Menschenversuche.

  6. Three more defendants, the camp leader, Lagerkommandant Fritz Suhren, along with "work leader" Hans Pflaum and Schneidermeister Friedrich Opitz (below, see the Second Ravensbrück trial), escaped from prison prior to the first trial. The first two of them were apprehended under assumed names in 1949.

  7. Following an evacuation order from Himmler, Ravensbrück’s commandant Fritz Suhren had the remaining 20,000 prisoners marched towards the north-west in several columns. On 30 April 1945, the Red Army liberated the camp and around 2,000 sick prisoners who had been left behind.