Ain-Ervin Mere Explained

Ain Mere
Birth Date:22 February 1903
Birth Place:Vändra, Governorate of Livonia, Russian Empire
Death Place:Leicester, England
Module:
Criminal Penalty:Death (in absentia)
Conviction:Treason
War crimes
Conviction Status:Deceased

Ain Mere (from birth to Estification Ervin Martson; 22 February 1903 – 5 April 1969) was an Estonian military officer in World War II. During the German occupation of Estonia, he served in the German-controlled Estonian Security Police and SD.

Career

He was born in Vändra and fought voluntarily in the Estonian War of Independence. In early 1919, Mere was wounded while serving on an armored train and was sent to the rear.

According to the KGB archives, he was drafted as an agent of NKVD in 1940–1941. Mere's reports on the resettlement of Baltic Germans and the exposure of underground Estonian organisations reached the desk of Lavrenti Beria.[1] In recognition of his performance[1] Mere was appointed the director of a special department of the Estonian Rifle Corps.[2] He was known under code name "Müller".[3] [4] In July 1941 Mere surrendered himself to the German military.[1] He was a member of the Estonian Security Police (Group B of the Sicherheitspolizei) under the Estonian Self-Administration and participated in the Holocaust.[5]

On 5 February 1945, in Berlin, he founded the Eesti Vabadusliit, an anti-communist group, together with fellow Waffen-SS commander Harald Riipalu.[6]

Trial in absentia

In March 1961, during the war crimes trials in Soviet Estonia, the German Security Police in Estonia, headed by Mere (and later by Julius Ennok), along with Ralf Gerrets and Jaan Viik, was accused in a Soviet court to have been actively involved in the arrest and killing of Estonian Jews. The police were also actively engaged in actions against Estonians deemed to be opponents of Nazi Germany.[7] Though at the time he was residing in Britain, Mere was sentenced to death for his role during the war. The British government refused to extradite him, citing a lack of evidence on the part of the Soviet authorities,[8] and he died at the age of 66 in Leicester, England.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Weiss-Wendt, Anton. Anton Weiss-Wendt. Murder Without Hatred: Estonians and the Holocaust. 2009. Syracuse University Press. 116. 9780815632283.
  2. Book: Snyder, Timothy. Black Earth: The Holocaust as History and Warning. 2016. Random House. 214. 9781784701482.
  3. Koputajad raiuti raamatusse
  4. http://www.swedenabroad.com/SelectImage/2466831784/Estland.pdf
  5. Patricia Heberer (2011): Children during the Holocaust, AltaMira Press
  6. http://www.hot.ee/vaikal/tana_02.htm Veebruari sündmused
  7. http://www.historycommission.ee/temp/conclusions.htm Conclusions of the Estonian International Commission for the Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity
  8. Reuter, 11 March 1961