BBC MONITORING INTERNATIONAL REPORTS: SWISS, VATICAN BANKS CITED IN US LAWSUIT OVER CROATIAN WORLD WAR II BOOTY
BBC Monitoring Service - United Kingdom, Sep 15, 2000, 266 words

Text of report by Swiss Radio International's Swissinfo web site on 15th September

The Swiss National Bank (SNB) has been named in a class action suit before the US Federal District Court in San Francisco. The plaintiffs are victims of Croatia's Ustasha regime during the World War II.

The Vatican Bank and the Franciscan Order are named as the main defendants of the class action suit. On 30th August, the court allowed the plaintiffs to add the names of the SNB and unidentified banks in Switzerland, Austria, Argentina, Spain, Italy, Portugal and Germany.

The plaintiffs say the Vatican Bank, the Franciscans, the SNB and the other banks hid valuables and other "treasures" stolen from murdered victims of the Ustasha regime.

The Nazi puppet state murdered up to 700,000 Serbs.

American State Department documents show the SNB received gold and silver deliveries from Croatia. These documents also say most of it was stolen from victims of the Ustashi.

The plaintiffs want the SNB to explain what happened to these valuables after the war, and have them returned.

One of the plaintiffs lawyers, Jonathan Levy, said some of the "treasures" might have been sent to Argentina with the help of the Vatican Bank, where thousands of Ustasha war criminals and their sympathisers hid after the war.

The lawsuit also demands that the SNB bank hand over any information about Vatican accounts in Switzerland.

It was thought that Swiss banks, including the SNB, were safe from future litigation concerning the World War II, after an agreement reached between the banks and Jewish organizations.

However, the court in San Francisco decided to allow the lawsuit because the Serb victims of the Croatian fascist regime do not belong to any of the "classes" of victims mentioned in the agreement.

Source: Swissinfo web site, Bern, in English 0729 gmt 15 Sep 00 /BBC Monitoring/ © BBC.

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