Czech pig farm on Nazi Gypsy death camp

Published: May 13, 2009 at 4:59 PM

PRAGUE, Czech Republic, May 13 (UPI) -- A Czech Cabinet minister said he will try to collect money to pay for the removal of a pig farm from the site of a Nazi camp for Gypsies in World War II.

Michael Kocab, Czech minister for minorities and human rights, Wednesday said he will urge companies to help form a foundation to provide $35 million to relocate the large pig farm at the southern Bohemian town of Lety, Prague Radio said.

In the Lety concentration camp, established by the Nazis in 1942, hundreds of Czech Gypsies, including 241 children, were killed.

Addressing a commemoration at Lety, Kocab said he would like to transform the camp site to a memorial.

In the 1970s, communist authorities of the former Czechoslovakia built the large pig farm at Lety.

The European Parliament and Czech Gypsy rights groups have been unsuccessful for years in urging Prague to relocate the farm. Czech government officials argued they were short of money, the radio said.

© 2009 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
UPI NewsTrack Business
App turns iPhones into musical instruments
Experts: Holidays good time for job hunt
Report: Apple buys music streamer
Six ailing U.S. banks shuttered
Study: Medicare cut before, reforms real
Venezuela seizes three more banks
fark
English teacher will need all her fingers to count the felony sex charges she just got slapped with....
"One of the indications you want to look for when you're on your favorite tree lot, is to look at...
"This guy was not back in society to try to be a productive member of society. He's definitely going...
Cops catch two women in a motorhome with 14 pounds of pot and a pound of shrooms. Are Phish on tour...
If you notice an eight-foot red weather balloon today while you're driving around, please let Fark...
Having solved all other problems, Texas legislature is considering banning tanning salons for teenagers...