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More than 50,000 people died in the Bergen-Belsen Nazi camp, including Anne Frank.
What is presented in the international press as the revelation of one of the most controversial mysteries of the Second World War, it seems not to be so on paper, or at least retain many of the initial unknowns and intrigues without the possibility of being elucidated, not even by the aforementioned team.
“We have investigated 30 suspects in 20 different scenarios, which leaves us with a scenario that we like to refer to as the most likely”explained in an interview Bayens, responsible for bringing the team together for the retired FBI agent Vincent Pankoke. And warned: “We are not 100% sure”.
Ana Frank

In August 1944, the Nazis found the Frank family’s hiding place and deported them to the concentration camp where Ana died at the age of 15 from typhus. It was the spring of 1945, the evidence that corroborates the theory about the clerk’s betrayal is a note transcribed in 1946 by Otto Frank, Ana’s father, while making his own inquiries about the fate of his family, reported Peter of Twisk, cited as leader of the investigation.
Between July 1942 and August 1944, Anne Frank hid with her parents, her sister and four other people in the annex of a building located in the heart of the Amsterdam canals. all finished arrested Y deported to the death camps. Sisters Anne and Margot died in Bergen-Belsen. Of the Franks, only the dad.
Van den Bergh’s name appeared on an anonymous note sent to Otto after World War II. It is still unknown who wrote it.. The original could not be found, but the investigator found in the file of the policeman’s son – who followed the trail of that information – a typed copy by Otto Frank. That is the evidence cited in the book.
Ana Frank

Presumably, in that paper the parent was informed that the data of his refuge “were reported to the Jüdische Auswanderung (Jewish Emigration Office) by A. van den Bergh”, who “lived near the Vondelpark in Amsterdam” and who would have compiled an “address list for that body”.
The Jüdische Auswanderung was the German department for Jewish emigration in charge of sending compatriots to extermination camps in Germany and Poland between 1941 and 1943. The information that concentrated Van Twist’s investigations had already been analyzed after the war, but the police determined that the accusations against the clerk were unfounded.
The personal diaries that Anne Frank wrote between the June 12, 1942 and August 1, 1944, published by his father in 1947 under the title of “Ana Frank’s diary”, become one of the most republished books in the world, recount his story as a teenager and the two years of confinement during the German occupation of the Netherlands.
Source From: Ambito

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