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German court authorizes police dragnets
By Elizabeth Zimmermann
1 March 2002
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In the aftermath of the September 11 attacks in the US, a German
court has now declared the use of controversial police dragnets
as a legal means of fighting terrorism. According to information
from the Deutschen Presseagentur (German Press Agency)
the Administrative Court in Mainz justified its decision by saying
that the present and substantial danger foreseen by
the legislature existed following the terrorist attacks in New
York and Washington.
The Mainz court thus contradicted the decisions of courts in
Wiesbaden, Berlin and Düsseldorf. In these courts, the judges
had concluded that the prosecuting authorities had not been sufficiently
concrete in showing there was an acute danger of terrorist attacks
justifying the use of a dragnet.
Just one week before the court in Mainz rendered its decision,
the regional court in Düsseldorf ruled that a dragnet to
scrutinise 5 million inhabitants in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia
was illegal, as far as it concerned German citizens. The Düsseldorf
court argued that it would be sufficient to limit investigations
to those persons, who were nationals of a state considered by
investigators to be suspicious, were born there or were followers
of Islam. Only these circumstances, the court claimed, gave
rise to any likelihood that danger may arise.
While the court thus declared that the routine examination
of 5 million Germans was illegitimate, it had no objections to
the further examination of 11,000 persons of Arab origin or those
who followed Islam, and rejected the legal complaints of a Jordanian
student from Munster and a Moroccan student from Duisburg. The
nationality of these two students, the court argued, meant the
actions of the prosecuting authorities against them were legal.
The openly racist undertones of the judgement unleashed ferocious
criticisms. Student representatives from throughout Germany accused
the Düsseldorf court of legitimising the racist special
treatment of young foreigners. The judgement allows the
state authorities to place all foreigners who follow the Islamic
faith under the general suspicion of terrorism.
Anita Susek, chairwomen of Munster Universitys student
body, which supported the complaint of the Jordanian student,
said of the judgement: What has happened is exactly what
we always warned about. The discussion after September 11
had racist undertones and the judgement now
goes in the same direction, she said.
William Achelpoehler, an attorney from Munster who represented
several others filing complaints before the Düsseldorf court,
expressed harsh criticism of the courts decision and of
the authorities methods of investigation in North Rhine-Westphalia.
Achelpoehler told the Sueddeutsche Zeitung it was outrageous
that the court spoke of the situation being similar to a
state of emergency that prevailed in October last year in
Germany, whereas both the state and federal interior ministries
had denied there was any concrete danger at that time. Moreover,
it was highly questionable to link all Muslims to
this alleged terrorist danger.
Several politicians criticised the judgement for the opposite
reason, because it had not unreservedly confirmed the practices
of the prosecuting authorities. North Rhine-Westphalia Interior
Minister Fritz Behrens, a social democrat, said: It could
well be the case that persons of German nationality were acting
as Islamic terrorists. Before launching the dragnet, investigations
had shown that many universities had no information in their records
about students nationality, country of birth and religion.
Therefore investigators had approached the residents registration
office to obtain information about all men aged 18 to 40 to be
included in the dragnet. One could not afford any gaps.
Behrens announced there would be no change in investigators
methods, despite the court ruling.
As a result of the court decisions in North Rhine-Westphalia,
Berlin and Hesse, Heiner Bartling and Manfred Puechelsocial
democratic interior ministers in Lower Saxony and Saxony-Anhaltdemanded
their own states amend their laws to make a continuation of the
dragnets possible. The recent Mainz judgement has clearly strengthened
the actions of the prosecuting authorities.
The dismantling of democratic rights
In a telephone conference immediately after the terrorist attacks
in New York last year, state and federal interior ministers agreed
on implementing an extensive dragnet, which exceeded all past
state monitoring actions and abrogated data protection legislation
for a large part of the population.
The core of the police and secret service operations was the
search for so-called sleepers. By this, the prosecuting
authorities mean above all students taking scientific and technical
courses, who are of foreign origin and follow Islam, and who are
characterised by many years of inconspicuousness. According to
such official definitions, any innocent person could be a sleeper,
who is then activated to undertake terrorist actions.
The countrywide dragnet, which was launched October 1 immediately
after the interior ministers telephone conferenceor
even beforehand in the case of Hamburg-is unparalleled.
Since it was launched, in Berlin some 58,000 sets of data records
have been compared, which revealed 109 as critical,
but without any concrete suspicions. In Saxony-Anhalt, data about
1,292 persons was passed to the Federal Criminal Investigation
Office in Wiesbaden for further examination. So far in Schleswig-Holstein,
data about 333 people has been filtered out. The state criminal
police agency in Bavaria wants to investigate 2,000 persons more
closely after the dragnet there, which turned up no concrete suspicions
about any so-called sleepers. In Hamburg, the dragnet
has resulted in 140 students being asked to come to police headquarters
to be interviewed.
In North Rhine-Westphalia, Germanys most populous state,
approximately 5 million people fell into the dragnet. Of 500,000
students examined, some 11,000 cases were filtered out for further
checks and were passed on to the Federal Criminal Investigation
Office.
The criteria applied to the dragnet were extremely wide-ranging.
For example, in North Rhine-Westphalia, at the request of the
chief of the police, the Duesseldorfer district court had instructed
residents registration offices and universities, as well
as the central aliens register in Cologne, to supply records
of all men aged 18 to 40 years to police headquarters.
A special commission named Working Group magnifying glass
then compared the various sets of records. This threw up some
11,000 people, mostly coming from Arab states, who are now to
be examined by the different police departments for possible involvement
in terrorist activities. The criteria for carrying out a dragnet
vary quite considerably in each region, according to state laws.
From the beginning, the political justification for the dragnet
revealed xenophobic undertones and encouraged the most backward
and reactionary social elements to hurl insults at and even attack
those of Arab and Turkish origin. It has also bolstered prejudice
against followers of Islam. Rarely before has the states
encouragement of anti-foreigner tendencies been so clearly demonstrated.
Telephone monitoring without control
At the end of January, only a few weeks before the Duesseldorf
judgement, it became known that ever since the last state elections
in North Rhine-Westphalia, some two years ago, there has been
no parliamentary control commission responsible for monitoring
police and security service operations. The G-10-Commission, as
it is also known, has not functioned because the social democrats
and Christian democrats could not agree on the composition of
this committee, which includes representatives of all the parties
in the state legislature.
Consequently, the secret service in North Rhine-Westphalia
has been able to plant bugs and listen in on telephone calls for
one and a half years without any parliamentary control. For a
whole period, and with an SPD majority, the state parliament has
failed to establish a commission to examine the most sensitive
intrusions into fundamental civil rights.
According to press reports, one bugging operation was extended
five timeslasting 15 months from September 2000 until December
2001without reference to the G-10-Commission, as is legally
prescribed.
In a letter to the president of the state legislature, the
chairman of the commission, which finally met for the first time
a few days before Christmas, expressed his criticism of this omission.
The letter talks of the great surprise and displeasure
of the committee members. Guenther Wegmann, an attorney and the
current chairman of the G-10-Commission, wrote that the manner
in which the state legislature has dealt with basic rights is
constitutionally questionable. He also criticized that at its
first meeting the commission had felt forced to indicate
its retrospective agreement to all the bugging operations
carried out initially without the agreement of the parliamentary
control commission.
It is not possible to conceive of a clearer expression of what
can be expected from the much-vaunted parliamentary control of
the secret services.
See Also:
German authorities suspend
right to demonstrate outside Munich Security Conference
[6 February 2002]
Main witness in German neo-Nazi
party trial exposed as secret service agent
[30 January 2002]
Second package of anti-terror
laws rushed through German parliament
[15 January 2002]
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