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WSWS : News
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: Germany
Greek victims of Nazi rule win lawsuit against Berlin
By Andy Niklaus
8 August 2000
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On September 20, the Goethe Institute in Athens will be subject
to a compulsory auction to provide compensation for Greek victims
of Nazi rule.
Recently, a court bailiff gained entrance to the building with
the help of the police, to make a valuation in preparation for
the sale. Three other official German properties could also come
under the hammer: the German Schools in Athens and Thessalonica,
as well as the German Archaeological Institute in Athens.
The reason for this state of affairs is a 1997 ruling by the
district court in Livadia, which was upheld in Greece's supreme
court, Areopag, in April this year. In the 1997 ruling,
Germany was ordered to pay compensation for pain and suffering
to a total value of 56 million marks ($26m). The German government
appealed, but lost and the compensation claims have now risen
to 100 million marks.
Two hundred and ninety-five survivors from the village of Distomo
near Delphi in central Greece had undertaken a class action against
the Federal Republic of Germany, with the assistance of the European
parliamentary deputy and lawyer Ianni Stamoulis, a member of the
social democratic PASOK. On June 10, 1944, SS tank grenadiers
of the 7th regiment stormed the village and randomly selected
218 people, mainly women and children, whom they brutally killed
in revenge for an earlier attack carried out by Greek partisan
fighters. The 1997 verdict and its confirmation in the Supreme
Court means the surviving villagers can now hope that after 56
years they will receive some compensation from Germany.
The compulsory auction of official German property was ordered
after Berlin refused to make any payment.
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder telephoned his Greek opposite
number Kostas Simitis to protest the sale. Fearing a precedent
may have been set, the German government reacted in an openly
threatening manner. The Greek ambassador in Berlin was summoned
to the Foreign Ministry. The protest note he was handed lacked
the usual diplomatic language, stating baldly that the actions
of the Greek authorities could disrupt years of good Greco-German
relations.
The German government accuses Greece of contravening international
law and Greek law, since the Greek Justice Ministry did not agree
to the verdict. Furthermore, according to the German government,
Greece had disregarded universal laws of state immunity,
which declare that the courts of one country cannot institute
proceedings against another state or its officials.
However, in upholding the ruling of the lower court, Areopag
rested on a new interpretation of international law ,
under which the USA and its allies had claimed to be
acting in the war against Iraq and in the Balkans. In these conflicts,
the apparent defence of human rights was expressly given precedence
over the fundamental tenet of state immunity. It was said that
in matters of genocide and crimes against humanity, states and
their office holders could not rely on immunity, since human rights
stand higher than bilateral laws.
The Greek Supreme Court has followed this argumentation, evaluating
the murders carried out by the SS in Distomo as crimes against
humanity. In this light, Germany cannot fall back on the defence
of state immunity.
The arguments that German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer
and Chancellor Schroeder employed to justify last year's bombing
of Belgrade are now rebounding against them.
Who can forget the hoarse voice of Fischer as he spoke about
Serbian fascism and concentration camps.
To justify the first combat mission by the German army since 1945,
the Serbian Prime Minister Slobodan Milosevic was demonised as
the veritable reincarnation of Adolf Hitler in the Balkans. A
clear breach of the ruling elite's own international law - NATO's
military mission was carried out without any UN mandate - was
also accepted, since this involved higher matters.
In contrast, the far greater crimes carried out by Hitler's
troops are dealt with according to quite different standards.
In this matter, the Foreign Minister's legal advisor Professor
Bruno Simma insists on remaining true to the letter of the old
law, saying state immunity must be respected. The new signs that
human rights have been ascribed greater weight are welcome, according
to Simma, but one cannot assume that they have already become
a usual part of international law. Moreover, Simma
said that despite having sympathy for the victims' relatives,
it is highly problematic to try and apply such an approach retrospectively.
Berlin is also insisting that the matter is already covered
by the global compensation agreement of 1960, which Greece also
signed. At the time, Germany promised Greece the laughable amount
of 115 million marks for the victims of the Nazi occupation. The
money was paid for the benefit of Greek citizens who were
affected by Nazi persecution by reason of their race, beliefs
or world outlook. As far as Berlin is concerned, this settled
the matter and no more payments are forthcoming.
Distomo, like many other villages, saw nothing of this money,
since the massacre there was not categorised as a Nazi injustice,
but as a normal act of war.
During its occupation of Greece between 1941 and 1944, the
Wehrmacht (German army) carried through bloody massacres
and revenge killings running into tens of thousands among the
Greek civilian population. All postwar West German governments
justified their refusal to make any compensation payments arising
from these crimes by classifying them as calls for reparations,
and thus excluded under treaties agreed with the Western allies.
At the Paris conference of the victorious allies in 1946, the
Greek claim for damages was put at $7.1 billion. In addition,
Greece claimed repayment of a further 500 million Reichsmark,
which had been paid by the Greek central bank to the German occupying
force in 1942 as an enforced loan. Neither payment
of the claim for damages nor the refund of the credit has been
made to this day.
For both governments the whole affair is very explosive.
After the conclusion of the international negotiations on compensation
for Nazi slave labourers on July 17, the German government thought
that the whole matter had been settled. They wanted to put this
old history to rest. However, the Areopag ruling
has created precedence in civil law.
In its verdict, the Athens' court said that the SS murders
in Distomo went far beyond the usual injustices of
war. Consequently, this did not involve reparations but compensation
payments within the framework of Germany's Wiedergutmachungsrechts
(Law of Restitution), which itself is dealt with internationally
as a matter of civil law. For this reason, the German government
was not immune from compensation claims.
All together, some 100,000 victims and relatives have been
pursuing a legal case for years. If the compulsory auction is
carried out, many victims in Eastern Europe will also feel encouraged.
For this reason, the German Finance Minister also warned the Eastern
European states against supporting further compensation claims.
The Simitis' government faces an intractable problem. On one
hand, they do not want to appear as the culprits at home; on the
other hand, they do not want to upset their NATO and European
Union partners. On January 1 2001, Greece is set to enter the
euro-zone; consequently the Greek Justice Ministry has initially
distanced itself from the Athens courts.
Foreign Minister Fischer has now filed a countersuit in the
Greek Supreme Court. According to press reports, the Foreign Ministry
is considering taking out a case at the international court in
The Hague. But this might rebound, since a defeat there could
lend the Athens' verdict even more weight.
See Also:
Business and moralscompensation
agreement signed for World War II concentration camp labourers
[26 July 2000]
Fascism
and the Holocaust
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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