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Germany: Massive state infiltration of far-right party
By Marius Heuser
17 October 2002
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On October 8, a hearing took place before Germanys Supreme
Court, the Bundesverfassungsgericht (BVG), to clarify whether
to continue the governments proceedings to ban the right-wing
extremist NPD (National Democratic Party of Germany). This legal
action had ground to a halt following revelations that the German
state had massively infiltrated the NPD.
When the government initiated its court action two years ago,
virtually every German politician joined the chorus of those demanding
a ban on the NPD. Today a deafening silence prevails. Initially,
none of the three plaintiffsBundestag (the parliament),
Bundesrat (the upper house) and Bundesregierung
(the federal government)wanted to send a prominent representative
to the hearing. Barely a week before the hearing began Interior
Minister Otto Schily (SPD, Social Democratic Party) announced
he would appear.
The BVG hearing became necessary after it emerged that a number
of high-ranking NPD members due to give testimony in the court
proceedings had worked as undercover agents for the secret service.
When the court found this out by accident, it suspended proceedings
last January. The October 8 hearing was scheduled to clarify the
extent to which the secret service influenced the activities of
the NPD, and whether they had provided the court with tainted
evidence. No decision regarding whether and how the proceedings
are to be continued is expected for at least several weeks.
Initially, the state refused to provide the Supreme Court with
a complete list of the undercover agents inside the NPD. Finally,
at the end of July, the parliament, the upper house and the federal
government agreed to supply the court with such a list. At the
same time, they demanded that the proceedings be conducted in
camera to prevent the public from learning the undercover
agents identities.
This would mean that the accusedthe NPDwould be
denied any possibility of disproving the accusations made against
it, or even acquiring detailed information about the charges.
Both the German parliament and the government have openly demanded
a secret, closed-door trial to ban a political party.
The governments court papers indicate that out of 200
leading NPD functionaries, 30 were working as undercover agents.
This means that one in seven leading figures in the party is on
the secret service pay roll!
Representatives of the secret services explained to the court
that the agency tried to place one to three undercover agents
in every NPD executive body. In response, NPD chairman Udo Voigt
questioned whether the partys national executive committee
had also been infiltrated. If this were the case, then the secret
service would also be informed about the partys legal strategy,
which would place an additional question mark over the legality
of the proceedings.
The government claimed it was necessary to conceal the identities
of the undercover agents, both to protect them from acts of revenge
by right-wingers, and to assure the continued functioning of the
secret service itself. If we unmasked the undercover agents,
we could close down the secret service, claimed Dieter Wiefelspuetz
(SPD) after publication of court documents.
Schily and Bavarian Interior Minister Guenther Beckstein (Christian
Social Union) tried to prove that the secret service and its undercover
agents had not exerted any influence on the NPDs policies
and activities. On this issue they sought to evade the judges
potentially explosive questions. The character of the NPD would
not change if one excluded the statements of the undercover agents,
Schily claimed. Which statements should we exclude?
asked Judge Joachim Jentsch. Schily could only refer to the six
agents so far unmasked.
Skinheads Sächsische Schweiz
The case against the NDP is not the only legal action against
a right-wing extremist organisation that is threatening to unravel
because of substantial secret service infiltration. A similar
situation exists in the regional court in Dresden. There, at the
end of August, the trial began against members of the banned neo-Nazi
organisation Skinheads Sächsische Schweiz
(SSS), which is charged with criminal conspiracy, incitement
to racial hatred, serious breach of the peace and grievous bodily
harm. The SSS is a brutal extreme right-wing group, with the declared
aim of cleansing the Sächsische Schweiz (Saxon
Switzerland, an area southeast of Dresden) of foreigners, drug
addicts and those of other political persuasions.
This trial ground to a halt, when the defence called for clarification
concerning the role of the Saxony state security services in the
founding of the SSS. Chief judge Tom Maciejewski thereupon demanded
the state security services provide a list of the agents within
the SSS. Although continuing the trial against the seven neo-Nazis
was dependent upon the government complying with this demand,
Saxony Interior Minister Horst Rasch (Christian Democratic Union,
CDU), like his counterpart in Berlin, refused to name the informants.
Even if the trial is continued, its result is now far from certain
due to this refusal.
The argument used by the government in refusing to name those
who infiltrated the neo-Nazis in Saxony is the same used in the
proceedings against the NPD: the undercover agents would be substantially
endangered if their identities were revealed. Minister Rasch
argued that the state had a greater duty to protect the security
and welfare of undercover agents. Furthermore, their exposure
would endanger the central functions of the secret services.
Who are these people whom the state has an overriding duty
to protect, and what are the central functions of
the German secret services? These questions can be answered by
examining earlier cases involving undercover agents.
In fact, convictions for bodily harm, incitement to racial
hatred or even murder have never represented an obstacle for the
secret service when hiring its personnel. Agentslike NPD
man Wolfgang Frenz or the neo-Nazi Tino Brandthave, on a
number of occasions, indicated that they regard funds received
from the secret service as donations for their organisations.
In reality, the line dividing the organisations being spied upon
and the secret service itself is barely detectable.
Money for Nazi music
A typical example of the real practices of the secret service
has come to light following the latest unmasking of undercover
agents in Berlin and Brandenburg.
Following a July 20 raid on the Nazi band White Aryan
Rebels, Berlin police arrested their marketing manager,
Toni Stadler from Cottbus. The band is part of the illegal neo-Nazi
music scene where it enjoys cult status. Among other things, the
band calls in the lyrics of one song for the murder of Brandenburgs
attorney general, German talk show host Alfred Biolek and the
vice-president of the Central Council for Jews, Michel Friedmann.
Shortly after his arrest, it emerged that Stadler had been a long
time undercover agent of the Brandenburg state secret services.
According to reports in the newsmagazine Focus, Stadler
was recruited as an agent in the spring of 2001 under dubious
circumstances. Secret service officials had tailed the neo-Nazi
Stadler, who does not possess a driving licence, and caught him
at the wheel. Stadler was faced with the choice of being prosecuted
or acting as an informer.
Although initially based on extortion, this collaboration flourished.
The news weekly Der Spiegel reported telephone calls between
Stadler and his secret service handler Manfred M, in which Stadler
complained about constant observation by the Berlin police. M
assured him that his boss (Brandenburg secret service chief Heiner
Wegesin) would ensure that this surveillance stopped. Moreover,
shortly before a police raid, M gave Stadler a new computer to
prevent data over his trade in neo-Nazi CDs being found on his
old computer.
Since then, Manfred M has faced an investigation on charges
of criminal obstruction in his official capacity. Other reports
assume that the financial stipends flowing to Stadler went directly
into the production of Nazi music.
Brandenburg Interior Minister and CDU right-winger Joerg Schoenbohm
reacted aggressively to this exposure. Stadlers arrest by
the Berlin police had been premature and unnecessary,
they said.
The Brandenburg state secret services came under pressure in
2000 when it was learned that it had continued to employ an undercover
agent who had been convicted five years earlier of attempting
to murder a Nigerian. Berlin city government representatives and
judicial representatives expressed the suspicion that Schoenbohm
knew about this decision.
Toni Stadler is by no means a small fry. According to the Berlin
public prosecutors office, he is one of Germanys biggest
dealers in Nazi music. His textile business in Cottbus and Guben
provides a cover for his trade in Nazi CDs. In court hearings,
he admitted that he had been involved in making the CD Attack
the enemy by the group Landser (mercenary).
Landser is part of the Nazi international skinhead union
Hammerskins. In their songs, they call for Israel to be bombed,
to hang niggers and massacre members of the Bundestag.
For two years, the Federal Prosecutors Office has been investigating
Landser for criminal conspiracy. During this time, Stadler,
who obviously enjoys close contact with this band and their followers,
was in the pay of the Brandenburg state secret services.
In the middle of August, Der Spiegel revealed that Mirko
Hesse, German leader of the Hammerskins, was also an undercover
agent, but was controlled by the federal secret service. At the
end of last year, Hesse had been sentenced by the Dresden regional
court to two-years imprisonment for, among other things,
incitement to racial hatred. He maintained his own music label,
the H.A. record (H.A.: Hate Attack, Hitler Adolf), which he used
to distribute Nazi CDs throughout Germany and in the USA. During
a search of his house in summer 2001, police found 10,000 CDs,
computers and various weapons.
According to the police, Hesse personally organised production
of the Landser discs and handled sales. For years,
the [secret] services obviously gathered the best information
about the most dangerous radical right-wing bandswithout
launching criminal proceedings, Der Spiegel reports.
The CDs were produced under the noses of the secret services,
distributed throughout the right-wing milieu and most likely financed
from taxpayers money.
At the end of September, the Lausitzer Rundschau newspaper
reported that the Berlin state secret services had also employed
an informant in the neo-Nazi circles round Toni Stadler. He was
active in the Weisse Arische Bruderschaft (White Aryan
Fraternity) and had provided information about Stadler.
These cases form merely part of the intricate web of connections
between the German secret services and right-wing extremists.
Such practices can hardly continue to be called slip-ups or scandals,
but seem rather to be the rule.
Instead of uncovering their agents, and providing clarity,
the German parliament and government are striving to obtain a
secret trial for the prohibition of the NPD. In order to cover
up their own anti-democratic practices, they are sacrificing fundamental
political rights. Regardless of how the Supreme Court finally
rules, it has become clear that in the alleged fight against right-wing
extremism, the state itself is moving ever further to the right.
See Also:
Germany: Neo-Nazi attack on Green Party
MP
[1 October 2002]
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