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Germany: Increase in extremist right-wing violence
By Martin Kreickenbaum
18 March 2003
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Last year again saw more extreme-right-wing motivated crimes
in Germany than the year before. Provisional figures for 2002
provided by the Interior Ministry record 10,579 extremist right-wing
offences, compared with 10,054 for 2001a rise of 5 percent.
The number of acts of violence also rose from 709 to 725, as Sebastian
Edathy (SPD) admitted in mid-February during a debate in the Bundestag
(federal parliament) over the financing of programmes directed
against right-wing extremism.
These were minimum figures, according to Edathy,
since numerous supplementary reports from the different Länder
(states) were yet to be included. The rise compared with 2001
could thus still increase dramatically.
In the first five months of 2001 over 1,000 crimes with an
extremist right-wing background were recorded. This number rose
continuously between September and December 2001 to approximately
350 offences per month. This compares with an average of almost
900 similar offences per month in 2002, a rise of over 150 percent
compared with the last four months of 2001.
This clear increase is even more surprising, since the Interior
Ministry had announced a decrease in extremist right-wing crime
at the beginning of January. At that time, only some 3,700 such
offences were recorded for the first 10 months of last year, with
a further decrease expected for the year as a whole. These hopes
were fuelled by reports from the Länder regarding
a significant lowering in the number of crimes involving right-wing
violence. This was ascribed to intensive control and monitoring
as well as the banning of various associations and to the pressure
of high levels of investigations and crime clear-ups.
By the end of January, Joerg Schoenbohm, the state interior
minister in Brandenburg, was already back-pedaling when the statistics
for the state were published showing an increase in extremist
right-wing crime of over 8 percent against the previous year.
In addition, the clear-up rate for these offences fell in Brandenburg
to only 39 percent, far lower than for other types of crime.
Massaging the statistics
How is the discrepancy between the most recent figures and
those announced at the beginning of the year to be explained?
Commonly, it is said that the figures contained in the annual
statistics are traditionally higher than the cumulative monthly
figures, since a right-wing motive for a crime can often only
be determined in retrospect.
More importantly, however, is the fact that the federal and
state governments are clearly endeavouring to play down the level
of right-wing violence. Thus, the number of fatalities due to
right-wing violence since German reunification in 1990 is officially
cited as 39. Journalists from the Frankfurter Rundschau and
Tagesspiegel launched their own investigations three years
ago and have documented 99 cases since 1990 in which people were
killed for right-wing motives.
At the beginning of the year the Interior Ministry announced,
No homicide in 2002 occurred as a result of an extremist
criminal offence. This is contradicted by the documentation
provided by the journalists. In summer 2002, in the Brandenburg
town of Potzlow, 17-year-old Marinus Schoeberl was abused by three
right-wing extremists who called him a Jew and beat
him to death because he had coloured his hair blond and wore flared
trousers. The case is not officially regarded as a right-wing
motivated offence.
One year earlier in Saxony-Anhalt, pensioner Willi Worg was
murdered. This crime was considered as robbery with murder, and
the prosecutors excluded a right-wing extremist background. Only
when the 19-year-old culprit tattooed a swastika on his stomach
while being held on remand did the prosecution change its opinion.
In order to massage the statistics the definition of extremist
criminal offences was changed. Until the end of 2000, criminal
offences were classified as extremist if the culprits motivation
was to destroy free democratic constitutional structures.
Since the term extremism remained very vague, resulting in differences
in the recording of such offences between the different Länder,
the Federal Bureau of Criminal Investigation set up a working
group on terminology. After months-long consultation, a
new definition of an extremist criminal offence was arrived at,
effective since January 2001the key phrase being political
motivated crime (PMC).
The division into PMC right-wing, PMC left-wing and politically
motivated crime committed by foreigners was said to extend the
categories under which such offences could be recorded statistically,
since the old criterion of destroying free democratic constitutional
structures no longer applied, meaning any political motivation
as a background to a criminal offence was sufficient for data
collection purposes. Since the term extremism was
not abolished, but used as a subcategory of PMC, the authorities
have been given even greater room for manoeuvre to register right-wing
criminal offences differentlyas right-wing politically motivated
crime, as right-wing extremist or also as a criminal offence without
any political background.
The authorities frequently exploit this situation. In Mecklenburg-Western
Pomerania, no right-wing violence was recorded in 2001 at all,
although the state had always been high up in the statistics for
the size of its population. Acts of right-wing violence were simply
registered as only right-wing. In Brandenburg, several
attacks by right-wing extremists on left-wing looking
young people were minimised by the police, who labelled them non-political
clique rivalries.
The murder of a refugee, overheard speaking Russian, in the
Brandenburg town of Wittstock in May last year and the above mentioned
murder in July of the young man in Uckermark, also in Brandenburg,
only appeared as a footnote in the report of the state
Interior Ministry, but were not recorded as acts of right-wing
violence.
The background to right-wing violence
The fact that right-wing, racist violence is more marked in
East Germany, even though the number of foreigners as a proportion
of the population there is infinitesimally small, clearly reveals
the link to the social crisis. Officially in East Germany unemployment
is approximately twice as high as in the West. In some regions
nearly one in three people are unemployed, although a large part
of the working-age population has moved away. In many places,
the lack of apprenticeship places makes the situation even more
hopeless for young people.
However, a social crisis does not lead automatically to the
strengthening of right-wing political tendencies. It can also
lead to a broader solidarity from below and so prepare a social
change. The concentrated appearance of the extreme right in East
Germany therefore has other, specific reasons, which have to be
found in the history of the GDR. Behind the façade of anti-fascism
and proletarian internationalism, the Stalinist ruling
party not only propagated naked nationalism, but above all ensured
that every independent movement of the working class was suppressed
and suffocated.
Moreover, all the parties, also those calling themselves a
left-wing opposition like the Party of Democratic
Socialism, wherever they exercise political influence and power
act against the interests of the population and implement increasingly
worse cuts in all social spheres.
Thus in view of the confusion about Stalinism, increasing despair
and hopelessness lead to the fact that the search for a radical
way out of the social crisis takes on, to some extent, reactionary,
right-wing forms.
Moreover, right-wing extremist ideas are encouraged by an official,
state racism. Federal Interior Minister Otto Schily (Social Democratic
Party) declares that Germany has exceeded the limit of its
capacity as far as immigrants are concerned, while his friend
and Bavarian state Interior Minister Beckstein (Christian Social
Union) divides foreigners into those who are economically useful
and those who are without use. The fight against
illegal immigration criminalises all foreigners, and at
the same time, most elementary democratic and social rights are
being systematically withheld from asylum-seekers and refugees.
Such rhetoric and policies can only be regarded by the extremist
right as giving approval to their own xenophobia and racism.
See Also:
German Christian Democratic
official gives interview to neo-Nazi newspaper
[13 January 2003]
Berlin trial of neo-Nazi
implicates Brandenburg secret service
[26 November 2002]
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