In this publication titled “German Labor Monatschrift für das geistige Leben der Deutschen in Böhmen, Volume 12”, by “Gesellschaft zur Förderung Deutscher Wissenschaft, Kunst und Literatur” in Böhmen, published 1913, we can read of Bulgarian and Greek atrocities in Selanik (Thessaloniki) and other regions committed against Albanians, Jews and Turks.
Cited:
“The Atrocities of the Bulgarians: They murdered more than half of the inhabitants of the Vilayet of Thessaloniki, a total of 55,000 people. The same thing happened in the Vilayets of Petrici, Menlik, Demirhissar, Osmanje, and Seres. In Radovista and Avrathissar, no Muslim was left alive. In the area around Serres, 3,000 Muslims who had taken refuge in mosques were burned alive. Over a period of twenty days, 960 Muslims were killed in Strundja. In Kavalla, 46 respected Muslim notables were robbed and then shot. The Catholic bishop was murdered by Serbian soldiers.”
“Atrocities of the Greeks and Bulgarians in Thessaloniki: Here, soldiers raped, robbed, plundered, and murdered. The Jews suffered the most. Greek soldiers attacked the Red Cross outpatient clinics. 250 Turkish prisoners were taken prisoner and were slaughtered. The powder tower occupied by 310 prisoners of war was blown up along with them.
Greek atrocities: Hundreds of corpses lay along the railway line of Salonika-Florina, their eyes, ears, noses and eyelids cut off. In Metelin the men were thrown into the dungeon while the women had to walk naked on the street. All these atrocities were confirmed in complete agreement by the reporters of the Daily Telegraph, the Frankfurter Zeitung, the Norddeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, the Secolo, the Vienna Reichspost and others”.
Reference
