The
legal complaint is not against
the content of the book, which
is a matter of freedom of
expression, but purely against
the cover. | Agence
France PresseWednesday, January 22, 2003 Swiss
nationals take legal action against Nazi
gold book GENEVA,
Jan 22 -- A group of Swiss
nationals has filed a lawsuit against
former US state department official
Stuart Eizenstat (right)
over the cover of his book detailing
Switzerland's wartime relationship with
the Nazi regime. The cover of "Imperfect Justice", on
sale in the US though not yet in Europe,
depicts a swastika of golden ingots
superimposed on the Swiss flag. The action
is being taken under a Swiss federal law
against defacing public insignia --
including the national flag -- punishable
by a 5,000-franc (3,400-euro) fine and up
to two months' imprisonment. "The legal complaint is not against the
content of the book, which is a matter of
freedom of expression, but purely against
the cover," said Geneva lawyer Michel
Amaudruz, who began proceedings on
behalf of more than 70 citizens. The Swiss
government last December expressed
indignation over the book, which
recounts the history of Nazi looting of
Jewish assets before and during the
Second World War. Author Eizenstat, a former
undersecretary for both the US state
department and treasury, helped negotiate
the 1.25-billion-dollar (1.2-billion-euro)
settlement between Swiss banks and the
families of Holocaust victims. Bern's embassy in Washington at one
point considered legal action against the
book, which concludes that the Swiss
National Bank -- the country's central
bank -- was the main buyer of gold from
Adolf Hitler's regime. The Nazis routinely stole gold, silver,
cash, precious stones and artworks from
Jews rounded up in Germany and countries
it occupied, before sending them to their
deaths in concentration camps. Related
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