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The death of Joseph Abdulla: German Christian Democrats encourage
anti-immigrant blacklash
By Peter Schwarz
5 December 2000
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Anger Is Growing in Sebnitz, was the recent headline
of a major German newspaper. The anger, however, is not directed
against neo-Nazis who foul-mouth their way around the town and
log onto its web site to fill the visitors' page with racist slogans
and calls for the assassination of government members.
Nor is the anger directed against the police and the public
prosecutor's office, who both stand exposed of sloppy work in
dragging out for three years their investigation into the death
of Joseph Abdulla, the six-year-old son of an Iraqi-German couple.
And certainly the anger is not aimed at those long suspected of
drowning the six-year-old child. What is growing is anger against
the Abdulla-Kantelberg family who suffered the death of their
child and afterwards found the courage to insist upon a thorough
investigation of the case.
The Süddeutsche Zeitung quoted a Dresden police
officer carrying out investigations in Sebnitz as saying, If
the family returns to this town, things could become critical.
He described the anger which has been building up in the
small Saxon town of Sebnitz in eastern Germany and which many
people fear could explode. It is feared this violence might not
just take the form of extreme right-wing e-mails threatening the
family, whose small son Joseph was drowned in 1997, but also the
form of outright acts of violence.
In the meantime, police have responded to this climate of anger
by making inquiries, not only into the suspected murder of Joseph,
but also into the activities of the child's mother and three of
the witnesses she has produced, who are now suspected by the police
of making false accusations. Joseph's mother is suspected of inciting
others to make false accusations. Last Thursday night a massive
force of police, accompanied by the local state attorney, conducted
a seven-hour raid of the family's house and confiscated all of
the material collected by the Abdulla-Kantelbergs into the circumstances
of their son's death.
The situation instinctively reminds one of the play An Enemy
of the People by the Norwegian dramatist Henrik Ibsen. In
this play, a town meeting declares a certain Dr. Stockman a public
enemy for having revealed the local spa watersthe source
of his community's economic prosperityto be contaminated.
The mob screams, Smash his windows! Throw him into the fjord!
His family is alienated from society and financially ruined.
Up until now, there is no real clarity about what happened
at Sebnitz's open-air swimming pool on June 13, 1997and,
in view of the three-year delay of the inquiry and the present
volatile political atmosphere, it is extremely questionable whether
there ever will be. Even if for a moment one supposes that Joseph
did die as a result of a swimming pool accident and that his mother
got carried away in her efforts to expose the tragedywhich,
considering the facts and protests that have surfaced so far,
seems extremely unlikelyreactions to the reporting of the
case show that a crime as described by the witnesses may have
taken place and, furthermore, could take place in the future.
The reaction to the case on the part of state authorities,
politicians and sections of the media says more about the structure
of the brown neo-fascist swamp (currently manifest over wide areas
of eastern Germany) than the terrible crime in and of itself could
haveif it did indeed occur. This reaction demonstrates how
and why it is possible for neo-Nazis to dominate and intimidate
whole towns, although they constitute an insignificant minority
of the population.
When the tabloid Bild made the Joseph Abdulla case public
on November 23, under the headline Neo-Nazis Drown Child
and a Whole Town Keeps Quiet, the story seemed perfectly
tailored to fit into the SPD-Green government's campaign against
right-wing extremism. A group of young skinheads commit a gruesome
crime, the community turns a blind eye, and finally the local
authorities and the government gravely assume their responsibility
and appeal to all citizens to make a stand against
the outrage.
A wave of initial sympathy was extended towards the Abdulla
family. The local CDU (Christian Democratic Union) mayor organised
a candlelight procession. Chancellor Schröder met with the
mother in his capacity of SPD (Social Democratic Party) chairman
and even Kurt Biedenkopf, the CDU prime minister of Saxony, saw
fit to attend a church service in Sebnitz accompanied by his wife.
The public prosecutor had resumed inquiries shortly before and
three suspects were apprehended.
However, it soon became obvious that the CDUwhose comfortable
parliamentary majority enables it to govern Saxony without a coalition
partnerand the local authorities were not interested in
an impartial clearing up of the case but were waiting for the
opportunity for a counteroffensive. This came when the public
prosecutor released the suspected offenders in response to allegedly
dubious statements on the part of the main witnesses for the prosecution.
Together with the investigating state attorneys, Minister of Justice
Manfred Kolbe (CDU) appeared before the press and set in motion
the campaign that was to give free rein to the outpouring of anger
against the Abdulla family.
Kolbe delivered a sharp attack on the Bild newspaper,
complaining that it had unfairly condemned a whole town. He told
the people of Sebnitz they should consider suing for damages.
The office of the public prosecutor insinuated that the Abdulla
family had bribed witnesses.
By this time investigations were still under way and many of
the witnesses were still to be questioned. According to the public
prosecutor, two of the people arrested were still being treated
as suspects. Apart from the testimonies gathered by the Abdulla
family, there were plenty of other indications that Joseph had
not died a normal death. These ranged from the rumours circulating
the town immediately after his drowningalthough the investigating
authorities made no effort to pursue themto a blood clot
on the child's right ear and residue of a tranquillising substance
discovered in the blood during a second autopsy of the child's
body, which was financed by the family. The agent found in the
blood occurs not only in the tranquilliser Ritalin; it is also
used by young people in eastern Germany as a substitute for the
drug Ecstasy.
Also to be considered is the 23-page analysis of the case by
the renowned criminologist Christian Pfeiffer, who came to the
conclusion that the witnesses were generally to be seen as credible,
but that the police, on the other hand, had proceeded with
a lack of interest and professionalism. The superintendent
of criminal investigationswho was based in Pirnahas
recently been suspended from duties because of other procedural
violations.
Under these conditions, the intervention of the Minister for
Justice (the official overseer of the investigating state attorneys)
constitutes an inadmissible intervention into the ongoing proceedings.
It is not difficult to imagine what effect his intervention is
having on the investigators, the witnesses and, above all, the
right-wing radicals in Sebnitz.
The Dresden chief public prosecutor's office can no longer
be regarded as an objective authority. Moreover, now it will be
even less interested in clearing up the case, because that would
mean discrediting its own role in the affair. In the summer of
1998 it had rejected the Abdulla family's appeal and defended
the Pirna public prosecutor's move to suspend proceedings, although
the sloppiness of the investigation was quite apparent.
The witnessessome of whom are juvenilesface the
prospect of being treated like the Abdulla family if they maintain
their testimonies. Given the volatile atmosphere in Sebnitz, any
of them adhering to a version of events that supports the accusation
of murder will be seen as troublemakers and traitors to the community.
Not only will they have to count on being socially despised and
alienated; they will also have to contend with murder threats
from right-wing radicals.
These right-wing thugs can only interpret the state's about-turn
in the case of Joseph Abdulla as evidence of their own unqualified
triumph and as confirmation of their influence. It is not they
who currently stand as objects of opprobrium, but those who pointed
to their crime. The threats they made against the familywhich
felt forced to move out of the townhave paid off. As in
Ibsen's play, the right-wing scum now speaks out against the enemy
of the people alongside respectable citizens for whom the
town's tourism trade is more important than revealing the truth.
Even if one subscribes to the improbable hypothesis that no
one was responsible for Joseph's death and that the despairing
mother overstepped the mark in her investigations, the question
still has to be asked as to why she was so sure about the murder
and was able to bring together close to 30 certified testimonies
to support her conviction.
A motive for the murder is not hard to find. The German-Iraqi
family came to Sebnitz in 1996 to escape hostilities in the Persian
Gulf and find a peaceful place to live and work as chemists. But
in Sebnitz they were confronted with an atmosphere of hostility
and intolerance. The report of the criminologist, Christian Pfeiffer,
takes up this point: Further statements describe an oppressive
atmosphere of ... fear, hostility towards foreigners and organised
mobbing of Mr. and Mrs. Abdulla by the community.
If the family had been granted the human sympathy normally
shown in such instances after the loss of a child, then the case
would have been cleared up relatively quicklyin one way
or another. Instead, they had to barricade themselves in their
flat for three years and hardly dared to walk through the streets.
When the case became public, they were finally driven out of the
town.
The area of Saxony where Sebnitz is situated has long been
known as a stronghold of right-wing radicalism. It is a centre
for right-wing elements particularly prone to acts of violence.
Here the NPD (the extreme right-wing National People's Party of
Germany) has more members than the SPD (the majority coalition
partner in the federal government) and boasts numerous representatives
in town councilsincluding the one in Sebnitz. As in many
towns in eastern Germany skinheads are part of the local scenery.
The case of the Abdulla child exposes the way in which bourgeois
politicians are creating the conditions for the extreme right
to prosper.
One day after the intervention of his Minister for Justice,
Prime Minister Biedenkopf also appeared before the press and took
the same line: Sebnitz's reputation had been violated, the whole
of eastern Germany had been defamed. He attacked Federal Chancellor
Schröder for holding a personal meeting with Joseph's mother
and went so far as to claim that television reporters had paid
out money to brawling right-wing radicals in front of the Abdulla's
household. Now the victims were not the family that had been mobbed
after losing their child, but the citizens of Sebnitz
and east Germans in general.
This is not the first time that Biedenkopf has reacted sympathetically
to right-wing agitation. When a violent mob drove asylum-seekers
out of Hoyerswerda in 1991 and police looked on passively, not
a word of protest came from Saxony's head of state.
The government of Saxony under Biedenkopf's leadership for
the last 10 years has long been regarded as a haven for right-wing
politicians. From 1990 until September of this year the Ministry
of Justice was headed by Steffen Heitmann, whose name cropped
up in headlines in 1993 on account of his expressions of hostility
towards foreigners. At the time, former federal Chancellor Helmut
Kohl caused a sensation by nominating this eastern German Church
legate for the office of federal president.
Following a visit to Stuttgart and other west German cities,
Heitmann remarked on the large numbers of immigrant workers to
be found and said he found to be threatening the alienation
which one encounters arising out of the cultural mix
of the most varied peoples and curious appearance
of the city centres. He had come to the conclusion that
the Germans have to be protected against too much foreign
influence.
After his comments became public he was forced to withdraw
his candidacy for Germany's highest state post, but he was allowed
to remain as Justice Minister in Saxony. He occupied this office
at the time of Joseph's death and allowed the investigations to
dry up. He was eventually forced to resign when it became known
that he had leaked details of a criminal investigation to a party
colleague implicated in the case.
Heitmann's successor Manfrede Kolbe is a member of the right-wing
CSU in Bavaria, but with family roots in Saxony. His family moved
from East to West Germany in 1959 and he began his political career
in Munich, taking up senior government posts in the eighties.
In 1990 he returned to Saxony and gained a parliamentary seat
representing a community in Saxony.
See Also:
The death of six-year-old Joseph Abdulla
reveals dominance of extreme right in East Germany
[2 December 2000]
How the conservative CDU/CSU
alliance in Germany stirs up hatred against foreigners
[30 November 2000]
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