Event: Execution of the commander of a German submarine, Heinz-Wilhelm Eck, who ordered to shoot the sailors of a Greek merchant vessel
Date: 30 November
This episode is one of the few in the history of World War II, when the crew of a submarine were convicted of war crimes.
On 13 March 1944, a German submarine, U-852, was patrolling the waters of the South Atlantic off the African coast, when it came across a Greek steam merchant ship, the SS Peleus. Captain Heinz-Wilhelm Eck issued an order to fire torpedoes at the vessel. Some of the Greek sailors managed to flee the sinking ship, with people clinging to her fragments and life rafts. Then, Eck ordered to shoot the survivors. The incident was made public following the accounts of three surviving sailors, who remained in the open sea for a month and a half after the incident.
The crew of the submarine and her captain were taken prisoner by the British, and thereafter five crew members appeared before a court in Hamburg.
It happened to be possible to prove the guilt of Eck and his subordinates due to a full confession by one of those involved in the shooting.
Three defendants - 29-year-old Eck, as well as a vessel doctor, and his deputy, who had no right to use firearms - were sentenced to capital punishment. While the other two were sent to jail.