Germany to pay millions to Jewish family

Germany must pay the descendants of the Jewish Schocken family $A75 million in compensation for a chain store seized by Nazis in 1938.

A Berlin tribunal has ordered Germany to pay 50 million euros ($A75 million) in reparations to the descendants of a Jewish family whose chain of department stores was seized by the Nazis.

The Schocken family lost several shops, mainly in the eastern region of Saxony, in 1938 during the Nazis' so-called "Aryanisation" of German businesses, said a court statement.

Berlin's administrative tribunal ordered Germany to pay 30 million euros of compensation for the seizure as well as 20 million euros in interest.

The Schocken family received 30 million Deutsche Marks (around 15 million euros) in the 1990s for the loss of a building in the eastern city of Chemnitz, which has been transformed into an archaeological museum.

The German state can appeal the decision before the federal administrative court based in Leipzig, the tribunal said in a statement.


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