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WSWS : News
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German Interior Minister plans massive restrictions on the
right of assembly
By Martin Kreickenbaum
14 July 2004
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Against a background of continuing attacks aimed at limiting
democratic rights in Germany it is useful to once again review
the decline of the Weimar Republic.
The enemy is on the right! This was the proclamation
made by the Centre Party politician and German Chancellor Josef
Wirth in 1922 following the assassinations of Matthias Erzberger
and German Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau by extreme right-wing
military officers. Wirth immediately passed a Law for the
protection of the Republic, which contained as its first
provision extensive restrictions on the right of assembly.
In practice, however, the law was principally used against
left-wing political demonstrations. Regardless of their Sunday
speeches, the political elite and the leaders of German social
democracy, led by President Friedrich Ebert, feared above all
growing popular opposition and the dangers of a socialist revolution.
Although today there is no movement comparable to the brownshirt
masses of the twenties and thirties, a similar development is
taking place. There was an outcry following the march made by
a few hundred neo-Nazis through Berlins Brandenburg Gate
on January 29, 2000, with loud calls made for a limitation of
the right to assembly. The conference of German state interior
ministers commissioned German Interior Minister Otto Schily (SPDGerman
Social Democratic Party) to draw up a draft law. This draft has
now been completed and was presented this week to the conference
of state interior ministers meeting in Kiel.
To accomplish his aim of drastically restricting the right
of assembly, Schily has skilfully utilised the fact that at the
beginning of next year a memorial to the Holocaust is to be completed
in the German capital. He has also used the threat, which he himself
has raised on many occasions, of so-called Islamic terror
to insist on pushing ahead with his plans.
According to Spiegel-Online, which has a copy of the
draft, Schily will be empowered to ban a gathering when it either
glorifies or plays down national socialist or other violent
or tyrannical regimes or terrorist groups or terrorist attacks
at home or abroad in a manner that threatens the public peace.
According to existing law, it is possible to ban gatherings
that represent a danger for public security and order.
In the future, however, this will also be possible when there
is no threat of a criminal violation of public security.
In other words, the political orientation of a gathering is sufficient
grounds for it to be banned.
On the basis of the draft, it would be possible, for example,
to ban demonstrations against the Kosovo and Iraq wars by claiming
that the demonstrators were glorifying violent and tyrannical
rulers such as Slobodan Milosevic and Saddam Hussein. It
would be also be possible to ban any demonstrations organised
to protest the US occupation of Iraq or the terror attacks carried
out by the Israeli government against Palestinians. In the final
analysis, it is the state that can decide on what is to be regarded
as legitimate protest or terrorism.
In addition, it will be possible to ban gatherings when they
take place at a location that commemorates in a clear manner
the victims of an organised inhumane treatment and that is regarded
as a national symbol for this treatment, and when the gathering
is designed to condone, deny or play down this inhumane treatment
of victims.
This definition could include right-wingers protesting their
expulsion from eastern European countries at the end of the Second
World War as well as demonstrations demanding social equality
and justice. Such protests could be banned if they took place
in front of the many buildings in Berlin associated with the former
Stalinist regime of East Germany (i.e., if the demonstrations
were interpreted as playing down the significance of the victims
of Stalinism). In fact, based on the presence of historically
significant locations strewn throughout the capital city, it would
be possible to ban demonstrations in virtually all of Berlin.
In the course of the debate, the German ruling elite has used
every type of argument to justify the arbitrary banning of irksome
demonstrations. The interior senator for the Berlin Senate, Ehrhart
Körting (SPD), declared he was no longer prepared to
sit in a traffic jam for hours because of a demonstration
and would prefer to ban protests from commercial areas because
they jeopardise the business of shopkeepers and small traders.
In fact, the very nature of public protest demands that such
activities take place in public in order to win attention, rather
than in remote spots where demonstrators are incapable of attracting
public interest.
The draft law corresponds to demands that have been raised
for some time by right-wing law-and-order politiciansto
be able to unceremoniously ban or break up unwelcome demonstrations.
As a result, the basic right to assembly is reduced to an act
of indulgence by those in power.
No one should have any illusions that the restrictions will
only be imposed on protests by neo-Nazis. In the course of recently
establishing a central data bank for right-wing extremism, for
example, state authorities also ensured that a data bank on left-wingers
would be included. Existing travel restrictions for football hooligans
were quietly extended to anti-globalisation protesters in order
to prevent demonstrators taking part in international political
activities.
Predictably, Schilys venture has received unreserved
support from the ranks of the conservative oppositionCDU
and CSUwho are eager to push the measure through parliament
as quickly as possible. Wolfgang Bosbach (CDUChristian Democratic
Union) declared he was very pleased that after years of
nudging, the interior minister has finally seen the sense of tightening
up the right of assembly.
Some members from the ranks of the SPD, the liberal FDP and
the Greens have expressed their constitutional concerns
regarding restrictions to the right of assembly, but other leading
members have given thoroughly positive signals. The chairperson
of the parliamentary committee for internal affairs, Cornelia
Sonntag-Wolgast (SPD), declared her fundamental agreement with
the proposals. According to the Stuttgarter Zeitung, the
speaker of the SPD parliamentary fraction for internal affairs,
Dieter Wiefelspütz, loudly advocates that in the individual
states, we open up the possibility in a very cautious manner of
proclaiming zones, restricted areas and pacified districts.
The Greens have declared that they will put up massive resistance
to the changes in the law to the right of assembly, but they made
the same declaration with regard to the recent debate over German
immigration legislation, only to capitulate entirely and support
the drastic tightening up of the law. It should also be recalled
that it was a leading Green, Renate Künast, Germanys
current minster for consumer affairs, who in 2000 agitated to
ban demonstrations held under certain themes and at certain places.
At the time, the WSWS commented, Basic rights,
such as the right to demonstrate, right to assembly and right
of public opinion, are not exclusive rights. They apply to everybody.
Their abolition or curtailment affects everybody. They are particularly
necessary where the exercise of freedom of speech in the form
of a demonstration or public meeting is not acceptable to official
politics, the state and its officials, or the majority of society.
Lessons of the Weimar Republic
The fact that this enormous attack on democratic rights is
being pressed for by the SPD is especially remarkable in view
of the historical experiences undergone by and through social
democracy in Germany.
It was the social democratic Berlin Chief of Police Karl-Friedrich
Zörgiebel who in December 1928 declared a ban on demonstrations
aimed at preventing the traditional May Day gathering from taking
place. When on May 1, 1929, 200,000 followed the appeal made by
the German Communist Party (KPD), they were met by 13,000 police
who proceeded against the demonstration in a thoroughly ruthless
manner. Groups of demonstrators were battered down with clubs,
and then police shot wildly into the protesting masses.
Three days later, 33 lay dead with more than 200 wounded. A
total of 1,200 workers were imprisoned. The Red Front Fighters
League, an organisation affiliated to the KPD, was banned shortly
afterwards. Approval for the brutal actions of Zörgiebels
men came from the Prussian Interior Minister Albert Grzesinski
as well as from the national Interior Minister Carl Severingboth
members of the SPD.
In the end, however, the state campaign against the Communists
led to the collapse of the social democratic government of Prussia.
In June and July of 1932, NSDAP storm troopers, backed by the
police, provoked a series of increasingly bloody confrontations
in working class neighbourhoods in Prussian towns. The German
Chancellor von Papen sacked the Prussian state government led
by Prime Minister Otto Braun (SPD,) promptly accusing it of idleness
and so-called partiality by the police in favour of the
communists. Grzesinski, who had put hundreds of communists
behind bars, now found himself accused of abetting the Communists.
Up until 1930, SPD officials across the country had repeatedly
supported or themselves introduced Laws for the protection
of the Republic. The primary reason given for suspending
or drastically curtailing basic democratic rights was always the
struggle against the right-wing and against the enemies
of the Republic. After the Nazi takeover of power in January
1933, Hitlers regime was able to ruthlessly exploit emergency
laws already on the books to decimate the ranks of the social
democratic and Communist parties.
The SPD, whose leadership had politically pledged their allegiance
to the bourgeoisie in 1918, became a factor in the rise of fascism,
only later to fall victim to the very legislation they had introduced.
It was above all the social crisismass unemployment,
the impoverishment of broad layers of society, together with wage
cutting and cuts to welfare provisions while huge subsidies were
given to industry and the propertiedthat paved the way for
the restrictions of democratic rights.
Today, it is the social democratic government of Gerhard Schröder
that is radically paring back the welfare state and provoking
a growing social crisis. The gulf between rich and poor is growing
continuously, and once again democratic rights are being undermined
as part of the struggle against the right-wing and against
terror.
In the name of a vigorous democracy, Interior Minister
Schily has already introduced two packages of anti-terror laws,
and has also initiated drastic changes to Germanys laws
on immigration, data protection, right to asylum and right to
organise. Huge increases have been made in Germanys security
agencies, and their powers have been broadened on an extensive
scale. Under the SPD-Green Party coalition, the constitutional
state has increasingly come to resemble a police state.
Against a background of growing resistance to the breaking
up of the German welfare state, Otto Schily has now set his sights
on the right of assembly. He has been given this opportunity by
those who drew up Germanys constitution in 1949 and added
the paragraph: For gatherings in the open, this right [of
assembly] can be limited through law or on the basis of a law.
The historian and political scientist Wolfgang Kraushaar described
this clause in the Frankfurter Rundschau as a gateway
for authoritarian state restrictions. Authorities already
have broad measures at their disposal to allow the banning of
demonstrations or only permit meetings under the most severe restrictions.
However, with the passing of the Schily draft, the right of assembly
will be watered down in such a manner as to strip it of any real
democratic content.
Parallels between the current German republic and the Weimar
Republic should not be taken too far, as history does not simply
repeat itself. But it is necessary to draw a serious warning from
the historical record. Wracked by social crisis in the twenties
and thirties of the last century, bourgeois governments turned
to authoritarian means of rule that opened the way for fascist
dictatorship.
See Also:
The German Social
Democratic Party: 140 years
[30 May 2003]
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