Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
International

Auschwitz Memorial Says Playing 'Pokemon Go' Not Allowed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jul, 2016 01:28 PM
    WARSAW, Poland — The Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum says it does not allow people to play "Pokemon Go" on their smartphones during visits to the former German death camp because it is "disrespectful.”
     
    Museum spokesman Pawel Sawicki told The Associated Press on Wednesday that its authorities are asking game producers to exclude the site of the former Nazi German death camp from games.
     
    He said allowing such games to be active on the authentic grounds of the former death camp is "disrespectful to the memory of the victims of the German Nazi concentration and extermination camp on many levels and it is absolutely inappropriate."
     
    The museum is a site of commemoration for the estimated 1.1 million people killed in Auschwitz-Birkenau and to the survivors who suffered as camp inmates. Most of the victims were European Jews who perished in the gas chambers, but there were also Poles, Roma, Soviet prisoners of war and others.
     
    "Pokemon Go" is a hugely popular new reality game that uses GPS and allows players to search locations in the real world to find virtual little creatures.
     
    Earlier in the day the Auschwitz memorial wrote on Twitter: "Do not allow playing #PokemonGO on the site of our Memorial and similar places. It's disrespectful on many levels."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks
    At least once a week, 76-year-old Ken Dacko makes the 200-kilometre round trip from his home in Alma, Ont., to the factory in Brampton, Ont., where he works.

    Auto Sales On Pace For Record, Driven By Popularity Of Light Trucks

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany
    Aqilah Sandhu, a star student at Augsburg University law faculty, began a traineeship with the Bavarian judicial system after completing her state law exams, but was told in a letter that she was not allowed to interrogate witnesses or appear in courtrooms while wearing her headscarf.

    Aqilah Sandhu, Muslim Woman Wins Right To Wear Headscarf At Work In Germany

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown
    Lauding Lord Swraj Paul and his family, Britain's former Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said their "dynamism and contribution" to the community has changed the lives of many people across several countries.

    Lord Paul Family's Dynamism Has Changed Many Lives: UK's Ex-PM Gordon Brown

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore
    Three months after they failed to sell the Kingfisher House, erstwhile headquarters of the defunct Kingfisher Airlines, lenders have once again put up the property for auction with a lower reserve price of Rs 135 crore so as to part-recover their loans.

    Lenders Lower Kingfisher House Reserve Price To Rs 135 Crore

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    A cross-party group of British lawmakers led by Indian-origin lawmaker Keith Vaz has called on the UK government to decriminalise sex work and prostitution, first time in decades that Parliament has considered the "polarising" subject.

    British Lawmakers Call For Legalising Prostitution

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan
    Caitlan Coleman and Joshua Boyle lost touch with their families while travelling in a mountainous region near the Afghan capital, Kabul.

    US Family Begs For Mercy For Couple Held In Afghanistan