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Poland threatens to sue German newspaper over 'Polish camps'
Updated: 25/Nov/2008 13:19
The error was made in a report from Israel, printed Monday in Die Welt, detailing a visit by Israelis to the World War II concentration camp near Lublin, eastern Poland.
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WARSAW (AFP)---Poland threatened Tuesday to sue Germany's Die Welt newspaper for referring to the Majdanek Nazi concentration camp -- where 360,000 perished during World War II -- as a "Polish camp".

 
 "It's scandalous ... all the more since this is a German newspaper," Poland's deputy Foreign Minister Ryszard Schnepf told Poland's commercial RMF radio.
  
"I support radical measures. I'm thinking of launching a serious and high-profile court case for big money against this kind of newspaper so it will echo in the world press."
  
The error was made in a report from Israel, printed Monday in Die Welt, detailing a visit by Israelis to the World War II concentration camp near Lublin, eastern Poland.
  
The Internet version of the report was corrected Tuesday, with Die Welt explaining that Majdanek was "a German concentration camp installed by the SS in Poland which was occupied on the orders of Heinrich Himmler".

 
"We regret that the description of Majdanek as a 'Polish concetration camp' has caused anger and misunderstanding. We are well aware of the emotional impact carried such subjects," newspaper Die Welt said in a statement. "To avoid any further misunderstanding, we immediately changed the wording of the article... Majdanek was of course a German concentration camp. We apologise for this error," the statement said.
 
 
Warsaw regularly protests against use of the adjective "Polish" to describe concentration camps established by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland during World War II.
  
Of the 360,000 prisoners gassed or shot at Majdanek between 1941 and 1944, 230,000 were European Jews. Others included non-Jewish Poles and Soviet prisoners of war.
  
Die Welt is published by Germany's Axel Springer media group, which also owns major newspapers in Poland including the top-selling tabloid Fakt.

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