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Gynaecological and surgical tools from Auschwitz discovered

Some of over 150 gynaecological and surgical instruments allegedly used in the World War II Nazi German Auschwitz death camp and found in a nearby house in Oswiecim. Photo: Auschwitz Museum/AFP

Some of over 150 gynaecological and surgical instruments allegedly used in the World War II Nazi German Auschwitz death camp and found in a nearby house in Oswiecim. Photo: Auschwitz Museum/AFP

More than 150 gynaecological and surgical instruments from the Nazi German Auschwitz death camp have been found in a nearby house in Oswiecim, southern Poland, an Auschwitz museum spokesman said.

“This is one of the greatest discoveries in recent years,” Bartosz Bartyzel said.

“Everything indicates that these instruments were used by the gynaecologist Carl Clauberg.”

Dr Clauberg, a physician and member of the infamous elite Nazi SS, experimented with methods for the mass sterilisation of women. Hundreds of women held prisoners at Auschwitz whom he used in pseudo-medical experiments died due to the procedures he performed.

As the Red Army drove out the Nazis from the region of occupied Poland where the Auschwitz camp was located in January 1945, Dr Clauberg was transferred to the notorious Ravensbrueck women’s concentration camp near Berlin where he continued his experiments.

Taken prisoner by the Russians in June 1945, Dr Clauberg was sentenced to 25 years behind bars before being sent to West Germany in 1955. He was charged again on the basis of complaints filed by survivors. He died in 1957.

The gynaecological and surgical instruments were found in a house that was located inside a strictly closed zone surrounding Auschwitz during World War II.

Auschwitz-Birkenau, the most notorious of Nazi Germany’s death camps, is located in the southern Polish town of Oswiecim, which like all of Poland was under German occupation during the war.

It was first established to hold Polish political prisoners but became the Nazis’ main instrument in their genocide against European Jews.

Between 1940 and 1945 Nazi Germany killed some 1.1 million people, including a million European Jews, at Auschwitz-Birkenau.

Other victims included Poles, Roma and Soviet prisoners of war.

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