The head of a Polish-German organisation that represents victims of Nazi slave labour has played down earlier reports of new-found evidence that the American Ford Motor company used forced labour from Auschwitz concentration camp during the Second World War.

The man, Jan Parys, told the BBC that the documents recently released from Russian archives did not include definite proof of Ford's involvement.

Mr Parys said Ford's name appeared in a list of companies that had contact with Auschwitz, but that it was too early to draw conclusions about the nature of the contact.

Ford officials say the documents only show that vehicles produced by Ford were used at Auschwitz, and that there were no suggestions whatsoever that the company itself was involved in the use of slave labour there.

They also say that the American company did not control its European operations in Nazi-occupied Europe.

The list, obtained by Auschwitz museum officials, represents only a fraction of the entire Auschwitz archive, which was taken from Poland by the postwar Soviet authorities to the USSR.

Fund for Nazi slave labourers





On Wednesday, shareholders of the German chemical company, IG Farben, which appeared on the list, voted to go ahead with plans for a compensation fund for former slave labourers under the Nazis. The chemical giant made Zyklon-B, the gas used to kill Jews in the concentration camps. Shareholders at a meeting in Frankfurt voted to set up a million-pound fund to pay several hundred survivors. The first payments will go to former slave labourers over 80 who were at Auschwitz.



