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(6 Aug 2001) 6 August 2001 1. Wide-shot of Kiev street 2. Wide-shot of people at outdoor cafe 3. Mid-shot of Grigori Sagaydak, former slave labourer, in car 4. Wide-shot of Sagaydak at apartment building entrance 5. Mid-shot Sagaydak typing 6. Close-up of hands 7. Close-up of Sagaydak's face FILE - date unknown 8. Various of Second World War German invasion of Kiev 6 August 2001 9. Wide-shot of award ceremony 10. SOUNDBITE: (German): Michael Jansen, President of German slave labor compensation fund: "The Germans accept political and moral responsibility for what happened - the crimes which were committed in our names." 11. Various mid-shots of elderly former slave labourers 12. SOUNDBITE (Ukrainian): Grigori Sagaydak, former slave labourer: "Surviving the labour camps contributes to the development of the personality. It's like you have two selves, you go into a different world and observe the world as though you are above it." 13. Wide shot of bank exterior STORYLINE: Former Ukrainian victims of Nazi oppression started to receive their first compensation for slave labour during World War II on Monday. Ihor Lushnikov, head of the Mutual Understanding and Reconciliation Fund that was created to distribute compensations among survivors, said Ukrainian Nazi survivors will receive 65 percent of their money in two stages. Another stage of payments will be possible after all Nazi survivors in Ukraine receive their first part of compensation, which is expected by January 2003. The payment process is lengthy due to careful examination of the survivors' claims by Ukrainian and German authorities. The first 13 survivors of Nazi concentration camps were granted their money in a ceremony in the capital Kiev, which Prime Minister Anatoliy Kinakh and other government officials attended. Former camp prisoners are to receive 15-thousand marks (dlrs 6,800), factory workers 4-thousand 300 marks (dlrs 2,000) and farm hands and children 1-thousand 500 marks (dlrs 700). Michael Jansen, the president of a German fund to compensate Nazi-era slave labourers, asked survivors to accept the compensation as Germany's gesture of good will. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...