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Michael Hulton, heir to the Jewish art collector and art dealer Alfred Flechtheim, is deeply shocked by this revelation. "The Nazis disenfranchised, expropriated and expelled my great-uncle Alfred Flechtheim, they destroyed his life. And a German federal state lied to us for years and tried to cover up the historical injustice in order to keep his artworks," says Hulton.
Mel Urbach and Markus Stötzel, the lawyers for the Flechtheim heirs, point out in a statement that Bavaria is massively violating an international treaty with its cover-up: "The Washington Principles of 1998 clearly regulate how such cases should be dealt with. Bavaria should have informed surviving relatives of victims, reported the works to public databases and initiated restitution proceedings," the lawyers said. "In fact, it is clear that Bavaria did not want to adhere to these rules from the outset and shamelessly exploited the ignorance of many potential claimants. A massive injustice committed by the Nazis is still being upheld more than 80 years later.
The lawyers are now calling for the immediate disclosure of all known cases of looted art in Bavaria. "Everything must now be put on the table. The time for excuses is over"
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Andreas Scheuermann
Leadership Communications
https://leadership-communications.eu
You can see the original version and more on PRLeap here: http://www.prleap.com/pr/303254/looted-art-bavaria-suppresses-evidence-and-investigation