1) was a law enacted by the Allied Control Council for post-World War II Germany on 20 September 1945.
It also prohibited the application of any German law that might discriminate against any person based on their race, nationality, religious beliefs, or opposition to the NSDAP.
[1] The official text of the law was in the three languages of the occupying forces, although a non-binding German translation was provided.
Signatories for the occupying forces were Bernard L. Montgomery (British), Louis Koeltz (French), Vassily Sokolovsky (Soviet) and Dwight D. Eisenhower (American).
For the German Democratic Republic, the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union repealed the law on 20 September 1955.