BBC: The keepers of a vast archive of Nazi documents on the Holocaust have transferred copies of millions of files to museums in Israel and the US.
The electronic transfer is part of an agreement to open up the Bad Arolsen archive, overseen by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
The files, kept in Germany, were found in concentration camps and other Nazi prisons at the end of World War II.
Several countries have not yet ratified the agreement, delaying full access.
The archive will only be fully opened to the public when the 2006 protocol is ratified by Italy, France and Greece. That is expected later this year.
The ICRC says the archive has now transferred many documents from the archive to the Holocaust Memorial Museum in the US and to the Yad Vashem Holocaust Centre in Israel.
Chilling details
The 47 million files stored in the spa town of Bad Arolsen hold meticulously recorded information on forced labourers, concentration camp victims and political prisoners. They take up 26km (16 miles) of shelving. Copies of Nazi files transferred (more)
Vatican opens secret Nazi files
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Yad Vashem
The secret history of the Nazi mascot
Mark Alexander