Karl Chmielewski

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Karl Chmielewski
Personal details
Date of birthJuly 16, 1903
Place of birthFrankfurt, German Empire
Age at start59 years old
NationalityGerman
RoleFormer SS officer, concentration camp commandant and potential leader of Oberkommando Südafrika
Ideology National Socialism

Karl Chmelewski (born July 16, 1903 in Frankfurt, Germany) is a former SS officer, former concentration camp commandant of Gusen and Herzogenbusch, and potential leader of the Oberkommando Südafrika (South Africa High Command).

Appearance[edit | edit source]

He appears in the Oberkommando Südafrika should the Afrika-Schild achieve total victory against the OFN-backed Union of South Africa during the South African War, provided that the Großafrikanischer Reichsstaat completes the focuses that antagonize the Boers.

When these focuses are completed, the Boers in the Volkstaat will split from the Reichsstaat, beginning the Second South African Civil War. During this, Chmielewski will attempt to bring South Africa back under Hüttig's reign.

Should his Oberkommando win the Second South African War, they will inevitably collapse when Hüttig's empire does, with Chmielewski being assassinated by Wilhelm Dommes, leading to the collapse of South Africa.

Trivia[edit | edit source]

In real life, he was known for his brutallity and cruelty in the Gusen concentration camp, and was known as Teufel von Gusen (Devil of Gusen). Later also known for the same reputation in Herzogenbusch.

During his reign at Herzogenbusch, Chmielewski gained a reputation for corruption, eventually tried for personally enriching himself through stealing diamonds from prisoners. Deprived of his position and rank in 1943, the SS court sentenced Chmielewski to 15 years in prison for rape and embezzlement, spending the rest of the war as an inmate at Dachau concentration camp.

In 1953, he was tried for perjury, fraud, and bigamy. After his real identity was established, he was arrested by West German police in January 1959, accused of nearly two hundred counts of murder.

At his trial in 1961, he was found guilty of causing the deaths of prisoners through his brutality, and was sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour. The court pronounced him a sadist who took pleasure in killing prisoners, whom he did not see as human, by scalding them with boiling water.

He was released from prison in March 1979, on mental health grounds, and spent his last years in a care institution at Chiemsee. He died on December 1, 1991 aged 88.