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"Degrelle ......... started his right-wing activities in the 1930s, founding the
Roman Catholic and monarchist Rexist movement which won 21 seats in the Belgian
parliament in 1935. Hitler is credited with saying of Degrelle at the time that:

" If I had had a son, I would have liked him to be like you. ""



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From ........... Reuters

April 1, 1994

Headline: FORMER BELGIAN FASCIST LEADER DEGRELLE DIES

MALAGA, Spain (Reuter) - Former Belgian Fascist Leon Degrelle, the man Adolf
Hitler once praised as the ideal son, died in Malaga Thursday aged 87.

One of the last few top Nazis still alive, Degrelle died of heart failure
brought on by a lung complication after entering a private clinic March 10.

He had lived in Spain since 1945, where he fled after having played a prominent
role in the Nazi war effort by commanding the the German army's Walloon Legion
which he founded in 1941.

Rising to the rank of an SS General, he fought on the Eastern Front and won the
Iron Cross for his efforts. In 1944 he also won the coveted Knight's Cross,
which Hitler awarded him in person by Hitler.

Hitler is credited with saying of Degrelle at the time that: "If I had had a
son, I would have liked him to be like you."

Degrelle was born in Bouillon June 15, 1906, one of eight children. He started
his right-wing activities in the 1930s, founding the Roman Catholic and
monarchist Rexist movement which won 21 seats in the Belgian parliament in 1935.

After the Nazi capitulation in May 1945, Degrelle fled from Norway, which was
still occupied by the remnants of the German army at the time, in Albert Speer's
private plane.

The plane ran out of fuel over the Franco-Spanish border but the pilot managed
to bring it down on a beach near the northern Spanish beach resort of San
Sebastian.

Thanks to his good relations with General Francisco Franco, he was allowed to
stay and became a naturalized Spaniard in 1954, changing his name to Leon Jose
de Ramirez Reina.

Degrelle was condemned to death in his absence by a Belgian military court at
the end of the war but the time limit for carrying out the sentence expired in
1974.

He published his memoires in 1970 and never renounced his Nazi principles,
helping found neo-Nazi movements in Spain that are still active, especially on
the anniversary of Franco's death.

In 1970, his writings led to Belgian pressure on the Franco regime and an arrest
warrant was issued. But he disappeared from his Madrid home and after the crisis
had died down he eventually appeared in southern Spain, settling in Torreblanca,
near Fuengirola on Spain's Costa del Sol, where he spent the rest of his days.

He enjoyed undoubted protection from the Franco regime, but vehemently denied
reports he had used his privileges to help spirit prominent Nazis such as Klaus
Barbie, Joseph Mengele and Martin Bormann out of Europe and to safety in Latin
America.

After Franco died in 1975, Degrelle was again spared from extradition by the
transition government of Adolfo Suarez. He exploited his luck and he became
friendly with Spanish rightists including Colonel Jaime Milans del Bosch, jailed
for his role in the aborted coup of February 1981.

He won further notoriety in Spain by claiming in a magazine interview in 1985
that the gas chambers never existed, and that Mengele, the so-called "Angel of
Death" for his wartime experiments on Jewish victims, was a normal doctor.

A former Auschwitz inmate, Violeta Friedman, filed a suit against Degrelle for
his statements, winning on appeal. On Friday, she said in a radio interview that
Degrelle had been an extremely damaging element for Spain.

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