Som en mjukstart kan man ta ett exempel -
Arājskommandot. Här är några Wikipedia länkar:
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ar%C4%81jskommandot
http://lv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ar%C4%81ja_komanda
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arajs_Kommando
http://ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%9A%D0% ... 1%81%D0%B0
Arājskommandot anfördes av Viktors Arājs och anses ha mördat drygt 30 000 civilpersoner i Lettland, i huvudsak judar. Arājskommandot deltog bland annat i massakern i Liepāja i mitten av december 1941.
Ryska Wikipedia gör gällande att
ca. 26.000 civila hade dödats av denna trupp:
Подразделение принимало активное участие в разнообразных нацистских злодеяниях: убийствах евреев, цыган, а также психически больных. От рук команды Арайса в общей сложности погибло около 26000 евреев.[2] Часть членов команды Арайса также служила в качестве охранников в концентрационном лагере в Саласпилсе.[3]
Massakern i Liepāja (Wikipedia):
http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massakern_i_Liep%C4%81ja
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liep%C4%81ja_massacres
The Liepāja massacres were a series of mass executions, many in public or semi-public, in and near the city of Liepāja (German: Libau),on the west coast of Latvia in 1941 after the Nazi occupation of Latvia. The main perpetrators were detachments of the Einsatzgruppen, the Sicherheitsdienst or SD, the Ordnungspolizei, or ORPO, and Latvian auxiliary police and militia forces. Wehrmacht and German naval forces participated in the shootings.[1]. In addition to Jews, the Nazis and their Latvian collaborators also killed Gypsies, communists, the mentally ill[1] and so-called "hostages".[2] In contrast to most other Holocaust murders in Latvia, the killings at Liepāja were done in open places.[3] About 5,000 of the 5,700 Jews trapped in Liepāja were shot, most of them in 1941.[2] The killings occurred at a variety of places within and outside of the city, including Rainis Park in the city center, and areas near the harbor, the Olympic Stadium, and the lighthouse. The largest massacre, of 2731 Jews, and 23 communists, happened from December 15 to 17, 1941, in the dunes near Šķēde, on an old Latvian army training ground.[2] More is known about the killing of the Jews of Liepāja than in any other city in Latvia except for Riga.[4]
http://www.denmark.mid.ru/7e10.html
In the Fall 1941 the head of the "Perkonkrust" G. Celminљ, promoted by then to the rank of Sonderfuhrer, called upon the Latvians to join the volunteer "security team" under the command of V. Arâjs - a former Latvian Army corporal and a Riga University graduate - who headed the entire Riga police at the moment the team was formed. During the first weeks of its emergence the "Arâjs team" burned a Riga synagogue together with the people who had barricaded themselves inside and also exterminated about 2000 Jews and Communist party members. The overall strength of the "Arâjs team" sometimes amounted 3000 men (ЦА ФСБ. Ф.16. Оп.312. Д.308. Л.147-152)..
The Arâjs team’s personnel wore uniform of the former army of the Latvian Republic and had on their sleeves an armlet bearing raw head and bloody bones and an inscription: "Auxiliary security police". Later on, the team was outfitted with the SS troops uniform.
According to the archives, in July-December 1941 the personnel of this unit together with other police battalions carried out the executions of Jews in the Bikernieku forest (total number of victims - 46500), as well as in Liepaja, Talsi and at the railway station Carnikava (over 10000 persons). Also, the Arâjs team participated in mass shootings in the Rumbule forest (during the occupation - about 38000 persons were shot) (Колтанов А. Дело №2783 Военные преступления не забыты. Независимое военное обозрение. 2000, №16, с.7.). During consequent years of the Great Patriotic War the V.Arâjs unit was periodically dispatched to perform punitive operations in the vicinity of the cities of Velikie Luki, Baranovichi, Slutsk, Minsk.
Further, the police Arâjs teams and later Latvian battalions guarded the concentration camp in the city of Salaspils where prisoners were brought not only from Latvia but also from Austria, Czechoslovakia, France and other countries77 ("Палачи". Военно-исторический журнал №7. 1990. с.34.). During the entire occupation period 101100 Soviet citizens were exterminated in this camp.
/MC