A 100-year-old former guard at the Nazi concentration camp Sachsenhausen has been charged with aiding and abetting the murders of thousands of people during the Holocaust, German prosecutors announced this week.

Officials in Neuruppin, Brandenburg, said the man, unidentified in accordance with German privacy laws, worked at the camp in Oranienburg from January 1942 to February 1945, according to CNN.

During that time, prosecutors allege he "knowingly and willfully" assisted in the murders of 3,518 people who died there.

Join BJL on WhatsApp Status: Click here to Join BJL status for engagements, births, deals, levayos, events & more

Join BJL on WhatsApp Groups: Click here to Join an official BJL WhatsApp group for breaking news as it happens

“These include, among others, the execution by shooting of Soviet prisoners of war in 1942,” the court in Neuruppin said in a statement. “In addition, the charges include accessory to the murder of prisoners through the use of the lethal gas Zyklon B as well as the shootings and deaths of prisoners through maintaining life-threatening conditions in the former Sachsenhausen concentration camp.”

Established roughly 20 miles north of Berlin in 1936, Sachsenhausen held an estimated 200,000 prisoners, and 100,000 are believed to have died there. 

Cyrill Klement, the Neuruppin court's senior prosecutor, told CNN that the man is considered fit to stand trial despite being a centenarian. Officials consulted with a forensic psychiatrist, who determined the former guard can attend his trial for a few hours a day with breaks.

“It took a long time, which has not made things any easier, because now we are dealing with such elderly defendants,” Klement told The New York Times. “But murder and accessory to murder have no statute of limitation.” Read more at The Hill