Auschwitz developer pulls out

NEW YORK — The controversy over a partially constructed mini-mall across from the former Auschwitz death camp in Poland appears to have ended.

The shopping complex investor this week decided to drop the project and the Polish foreign minister said the existing structure would be demolished.

The shopping center, which was to house a supermarket, a home and garden center, and a fast-food restaurant, among other businesses, had drawn condemnation worldwide from groups ranging from Jewish organizations to the European Parliament.

During World War II, nearly 2 million people were murdered, 90 percent of them Jews, at Auschwitz-Birkenau.

The developer, Janusz Marszalek, who had argued earlier that the mall would create jobs in Oswiecim, the town of 45,000 where Auschwitz is located, reportedly said this week that all work on the project was halted and that it would not be resumed.

But Marszalek added that he would seek compensation in court for work completed and loss of earnings.

He said part of the earnings from the mini-mall were to be donated to local orphans through Maja, the developing company that he heads, which is linked to a children's charity of the same name.

Foreign Minister Dariusz Rosati, speaking at the Polish Consulate in New York on Monday, made it clear that a supermarket adjacent to Auschwitz would not see the light of day.

The Polish government issued a decision forbidding construction at the site, Rosati said.

"This is a place of special emotional importance for so many people," he said.

Before this week, other Polish officials, including President Aleksander Kwasniewski, had denounced the project.

The foreign minister also spoke Monday of a recent amendment to an existing Polish law that "gives special protection" to Auschwitz.