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The Daschner case and the rehabilitation of torture in Germany
By Justus Leicht
13 December 2004
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Last month, the trial opened of Frankfurt Deputy Police Chief
Wolfgang Daschner. Daschner is accused of having threatened a
kidnapper with torture two years ago.
Subsequently, it was revealed that torture was being employed
by the German army for training purposes. A connection
exists between the two cases. This is shown by the arguments employed
by Daschner and those who defend him. In the name of the fight
against terrorism, the police and military are to be allowed
to act outside the law and the constitution, and utilize methods
not seen since the Nazis ruled Germany.
In October 2002, Daschner had threatened to inflict severe
pain on Magnus Gaefgen, the kidnapper of 11-year old bankers
son Jakob von Metzler, if Gaefgen did not reveal where he had
hidden the child. Gaefgen promptly admitted that the boy was already
dead. Gaefgen was later sentenced to life imprisonment for murder.
Proceedings were initiated against Daschner for threatening
torture. However, it was more than a year before the public prosecutors
office finally filed charges against him.
He was not charged with having extorted statements, which is
a felony, but with coercion, which is regarded as a misdemeanour.
In a television interview, the public prosecutor made clear that
even this charge was an embarrassment for him. The indictment
expressed understanding for Daschner and adopted his justification
for the crime: that he was only concerned with saving the
boys life. There is no mention of the word torture
in the indictment.
Despite the public prosecutors reluctance to pursue the
indictment, statements were made during the first days of the
hearing that undermine the image of Daschner as portrayed by the
media. Conservative newspapers had presented the deputy police
chief as a tragic heroa man of principle torn by internal
conflicts, who followed his conscience out of concern for an innocent
child, for which he was now being crucified.
Daschner candidly admitted to the court that he had ordered
Gaefgen to be questioned after previously threatening to
inflict pain under medical supervision (without causing injuries).
He had even recorded this instruction in writing in a memorandum.
However, he vehemently opposed calling this torture. Rather, it
was a coercive measure adopted as a last resort to
avert danger.
Daschner even advanced his own definition of torture. According
to him, torture was the pre-meditated imposition of severe
physical pain, causing serious and cruel suffering which cannot
be justified in the given situation.
This definition of torture echoes the notorious August 1, 2002
memo linked to Alberto Gonzalezat the time, President Bushs
legal counsel (now Bushs nominee to become attorney general)providing
a legal justification for the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib
prison in Iraq and the US prison camp in Guantanamo. In that memo,
it was asserted that inflicting severe pain constituted torture
only if the perpetrator knowingly acted for the express and sole
purpose of causing agony. (In other words, electric shocks, beatings,
psychological abuse, etc. were legal and did not constitute torture
if inflicted for the purpose of extracting information). The memo
further declared: Physical pain amounting to torture must
be equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical
injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function or
even death.
In contrast, the definition of the United Nations Convention
Against Torture defines torture as any act by which severe
pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally
inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him
or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for
an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having
committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person (...)
when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation
of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or
other person acting in an official capacity.
This definition accurately describes Daschners actions.
Daschners subordinates also understood his instructions
in this way. This is why he had to overcome the considerable legal
doubts of his colleagues. A police lieutenant colonel at that
time stated he had reluctantly instructed the leader of a mobile
unit to designate an officer who could torture Gaefgen.
Asked how he came to use the word torture, he said
that he had spontaneously associated the word torture with a measure
that was intended to cause pain to a person in custody in
the presence of a physician.
The deputy police chief had even wanted to recall an officer
from vacation who was prepared to undertake this task and have
him transported by helicopter.
Daschner seems to have refused to use other means to get the
kidnapper to talk. A police psychologist had recommended confronting
Gaefgen with Jakobs relatives, in particular his 15-year-old
sister. Gaefgen knew the sister and also had a 16-year-old girl
friend. Although the sister waited several hours at police headquarters,
Daschner rejected this course and insisted vehemently on using
threats and then the application of torture.
According to Daschners statementand this could
help explain his insistence on tortureDaschner had obtained
the backing of his superiors. During the trial, however, he refused
to name these superiorsand the public prosecutors
office refused to investigate this matter.
The self-assurance with which Daschner testified is not accidental.
Shortly after the accusations of torture became public, he received
sympathy and support from the highest levelsfor example,
from the Hesse state premier, Roland Koch; the federal justice
minister, Brigitte Zypries (in whose opinion a justifiable exceptional
circumstance existed); and from the then-chair of the judges
federation and present justice minister of Saxony, Geert Mackenrooth.
The Brandenburg minister of the interior, Joerg Schoenbohm,
immediately referred to the fight against terrorism.
He said that if a multitude of people were threatened by terrorists,
torture should be considered.
A similar stance was taken by Wolfgang Bosbach, spokesman on
domestic affairs and deputy chairman of the Christian Democratic
Union (CDU) Bundestag (federal parliament) faction. In a talk
show, he said he was not in favour of torture, but there could
be some situations where the life of thousands weighs against
the physical well-being of an individual. At that moment there
would be a process of consideration, for which legislators cannot
find legal norms. As for the Daschner case, it was a classic
case of an extra-legal emergency.
In the same programme, with Bosbachs support, Rolf Jaeger
of the Federation of German Detectives advanced the opinion that
to avert danger the police are permitted to do literally anything:
Here we are in the legal sphere of danger prevention. We
are absolutely opposed to the term torture. If we must use any
term, then it is the term direct coercive measure,
which is governed as part of the authority to carry out danger
prevention by police regulations, which the police can legitimately
employ right up to the final rescue shot in hostage cases.
In other words, this prominent representative of the police
does not oppose the use of torture, but only the action of calling
it by its right name.
Jaeger also referred to the current political situation: We
live in times of a threat from Islamic terrorism, which is current
in Holland today, and we have experienced criminal offences against
foreigners. (... ) What I would wish myself is not that we permit
the police such direct means of pressure as to influence expressions
of will, but that we create possibilities, obviously through a
clear formulation of what constitutes emergency aid and justifiable
emergency. The deputy chairman of the Federation of German
Detectives, Bernd Carstensen, expressed similar views.
This discussion is not new. In the 1970s, the government of
Helmut Schmidt (Social Democratic PartySPD) invoked an extra-legal
state of emergency to justify acting completely outside
the law, the constitution, and express judicial decisions when
it temporarily imposed a total contact ban on imprisoned
Red Army Faction terrorists. It held them incommunicado, without
contact with lawyers or the external world. The Federal High Court
and the Federal Constitutional Court later supported the governments
actions.
However, the origins of these legal constructs go back to the
1920s. At that time in Germany, against the provisions of the
Versailles Treaty, which enjoyed constitutional status, former
Freikorps men secretly formed the so-called Schwarze Reichswehr
(Black Imperial Army). Anybody who exposed its existence or activities
was murdered. The culprits were for the most part acquitted, on
the grounds that they had been acting on behalf of the state in
an emergency, since the states hands were bound by
law.
Such precedents resonate further in regard to another current
torture scandal, involving the army and its practice of testing
out torture to prevent danger. It was recently admitted
that between June and September of this year, in an army company
in Coesfeld, recruits were trained this practice.
According to what has been revealed, recruits had to kneel
in their barracks, where they were sprayed with water. Two such
soldiers were tortured through the application of electric cables
to their neck, groin and stomach, procedures that were, in part,
filmed and photographed. The public prosecutor has refused to
call these procedures torture.
According to the Sueddeutsche Zeitung, this case did
not involve spontaneous actions, but was a planned part of basic
training. The exercise was scheduled on a roster by the company
commander, a captain, who has since been suspended from duty.
Coesfeld is not an isolated case. Preparations for international
military missions now include similar exercises as part of the
training programme. A number of individual trainers have made
themselves liable in law, according to the Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
In the spring of 2004, for example, an air force non-commissioned
officer was convicted because, on more than fifty separate occasions,
he struck, pinched or bound subordinates. In 2000, a private-first-class
was interrogated for nine hours as part of a role-play exercise
in which he had the part of prisoner-of-war.
In 1999, a technical sergeant was demoted because he literally
interpreted the remarks of his superior and mistreated a fellow
soldier captured in military manoeuvres. His superior had ordered
torture, while respecting the Geneva Convention.
Three years ago, a first lieutenant at the Army Academy in
Munich, who had written a training aid in torture methods,
was demoted. Among other things, this recommended cutting off
the eyelids of prisoners-of-war in order to extort information
from them.
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