15 January 1946 – a war crimes trial involving Nazis accused of committing atrocities in Belarus commenced at the Red Army House.
Eighteen German invaders were brought before the court. Among them: Lieutenant General Johann-Georg Richert, the founder of the Ozarychi concentration camp, Major General Gottfried von Erdmannsdorff, military commander of Mogilev, and Captain Relf Burkhardt, Sonderführer of the Bobruisk commandant's office. The latter testified in Russian. His words were translated into German for the other defendants.
They were charged with the mass extermination of Soviet citizens, their deportation into German slavery, and the destruction of cities and cultural heritage. On their orders people were shot, while towns and villages were burned.
During the investigation, the Extraordinary State Commission found that over two million Soviet civilians and prisoners of war were exterminated, about 380, 000 people were forced into slavery, and many towns were destroyed or burnt. The commission estimated the damage to the republic's economy to total 75 billion roubles.
The Minsk trial lasted until 29 January 1946. The court convicted 14 of the defendants to death by hanging, the others – to hard labour. On 30 January the sentence was handed down at a horse racing venue in Minsk.
Source:
History of Russia – the web portal History.RF
The newspaper "Pravda", No. 13 (10095) from 16 January 1946
The newspaper "Pravda", No. 16 (10098) from 19 January 1946
Report by the Extraordinary State Commission for the Establishment and Investigation of Crimes and Damages Perpetrated by German-Fascist Invaders