Career
Their bodies were discovered in a series of large mass graves in the forest near Smolensk in Russia following the Nazi German Operation Barbarossa. "On April 13, 1943, the German radio announced that a common grave containing the corpses of Polish officers was found in the forest of Katyn, near Smolensk. Further enquiries showed that the dead bodies were those of officers imprisoned by the Russians in autumn 1939 and about who nobody had news since Springtime 1940.
The CICR refused to deal with this problem without the agreement of the Soviets.
So the Germans called together a committee of international experts to examine the grave in Katyn. Professor Francis Naville, director of the medico-legal Institute of the University of Geneva, was the only expert really neutral in that commission.
He had the merit to prove quite clearly that these criminal executions were ordered by Stalin. After the Second World War, Professor
Naville was criticised for having accepted to participate to the mission to Katyn by Jean Vincent, a deputy of the Swiss labour party (communist party) who claimed that the massacre of Katyn had been done by the Germans.
Professor Naville got no support from the CICR, who “did not want to know” who was responsible in order to avoid diplomatic complications with the Soviet Union. Only in 1989 the discovery of Professor
Naville was accepted and confirmed by the Soviet authorities.".