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Article

Compensation and assistance for war victims

Victims' compensation and assistance is based on the provisions set out in the Federal War Victims Relief Act (Bundesversorgungsgesetz), which was originally enacted to provide for WWII victims and their surviving dependants.

Victims' compensation and assistance is based on the provisions set out in the Federal War Victims Relief Act (Bundesversorgungsgesetz), which was originally enacted to provide for WWII victims and their surviving dependants. As an underlying principle of victims' compensation, where appropriate the Act has also been applied for several decades to other groups of people who are entitled to claim under certain secondary legislation (e.g. victims of violent crime, people injured during military or civilian service, people who were imprisoned on the basis of an unlawful sentence under the SED regime (the regime of the Socialist Unity Party of the former German Democratic Republic), people with vaccine damage).

Victims' compensation and assistance is based on the type and degree of severity of the injury or illness and on the individual's actual needs, and comprises a number of different benefits. These include monetary benefits and payments in kind, such as pensions or assistance, physiotherapy and medical rehabilitation. Designed to compensate for the additional expense arising from the injury or illness or paid on purely humanitarian grounds, the pensions paid to victims and their surviving dependants are paid irrespective of the individual's income. Where the individual's need is not exclusively the result of his or her injury or illness, the amount of other benefits paid in the form of income or maintenance replacement depends on the claimant's income.

Where a special need arises, victims' compensation and assistance is supplemented by war victims' welfare schemes. These supplement all other forms of compensation paid to war victims. In most cases, assistance is provided taking existing income and assets into account and can, for example, come in the form of assistance towards long-term care, supplementary allowance towards living expenses and assistance in special circumstances.

The welfare offices for war victims at municipal and district social services offices or central welfare offices are responsible for granting these benefits.