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Germany: Former SPD chairman Lafontaine defends police torture
By Justus Leicht
3 June 2004
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Oskar Lafontaineformer minister president of the Saarland,
former SPD (Social Democratic Party) chairman and finance minister
of the Schröder government, columnist for the Bild
tabloid, and supporter of Attachas publicly advocated the
torture of suspects by the police.
Lafontaine made these remarks in connection with the case of
Jakob von Metzler. The 11-year-old bankers son was abducted
and killed two years ago. The kidnapper, a law student, had demanded
ransom, but was arrested by the police. In the course of his interrogation,
the vice president of the Frankfurt police, Wolfgang Daschner,
threatened to subject him to pain such as he has never experienced
before if he did not tell them where he had hidden the child.
The 27-year-old then made a confession; the child, however, was
already dead.
Daschner later confirmed that he would have acted upon his
threat and that he had already called for a police expert
on torture. He defended his behaviour and was supported by jurists
such as the president of the Judges Association and politicians
such as Norbert Geis, the judicial expert of the Christian-Democratic
Partys parliamentary faction; Volker Bouffier (CDU), the
interior minister of Hesse; and Roland Koch (CDU), the minister
president of Hesse. The interior minister of Brandenburg, Jörg
Schönbohm (CDU), declared that he supported the use of torture
in principle if a large number of people are threatened
by terrorists.
At the time of Metzlers kidnapping, Lafontaine had already
defended Daschner in his Bild column. The police officer
had been in an extraordinary situation, he wrote.
Today, more than a year later, Lafontaine returned to the issue
in a talk show dealing with judicial issues. If torture was outlawed
as a violation of human rights, he said, this applies not
only to the criminal, but also to the abducted child. Going
even further, he stated: I would consider it a catastrophe
for the rule of law, upon which our state is based, if this officer
was punished, because I feel that he has followed the most elementary
moral commandments of our state. It was inadmissible to
let an innocent child die a horrific death just to satisfy formal
articles of the constitution.
This line of argument is thoroughly perfidious. Fundamental
democratic rights have been fought for in history in order to
limit the force of the state used against its citizens. This applies
above all to the states authority in relation to its enemies
and toward real or supposed criminals, no matter the accusations
against them. In contrast, authoritarian and fascist conceptions
have always presumed that the power of the state must not be shackled
by formal articles of the constitution, and that these
do not apply to brutes or subhumans. Even if there
were laws and constitutional rights, moral commandments
stand higherif it is the state that breaks the law. However,
who is to judge whether the law and the constitution apply, or
whether they are outweighed by moral considerations?
Those who have the power decide.
Lafontaine very consciously made his comments in a situation
where the legitimisation of torture is not a theoretical issue.
For weeks, not a day has passed without disclosures about the
sadistic methods employed to defend freedom and democracy
in the war against terror. And if torture is acceptable
in the case of a kidnapping, supposedly in order to rescue a human
life, it is all the more so if a large number of lives are threatened
by terrorist attacks. This was the explicit argument of Jörg
Schönbohm. Lafontaines demagogical remarks on TV follow
the same logic.
It is no accident that Lafontaine has chosen this moment to
reiterate them. For a considerable period of time, Lafontaine
was held up by all sorts of petty-bourgeois radicals as the last
left-winger in the SPD and as a champion of the working
class. This fraud was justified by references to his advocacy
of a more stringent state regulation of the economy, which he
claimed would make possible certain social concessions to the
population.
However, he always saw social reforms as a means to suppress
social conflicts and to control, not to emancipate the workers.
He was the first SPD mayor, in Saarbrücken, to introduce
compulsory work programs for young social security recipients
20 years ago. Later, as minister president of the Saarland, he
tried to silence his critics by introducing laws curtailing the
freedom of the press. In 1993, it was Lafontaine who ensured the
agreement of the SPD to the virtual abolition of the right to
asylum in Germany.
When he became the first finance minister of the newly elected
Schröder government in 1998, he tried to cut back some tax
privileges of big business and to introduce a new tax on the huge
reserves of the energy corporations. German and international
capital hit back with an aggressive campaign. Lafontaine capitulated
and resigned when he found no support among the government and
the ruling establishment.
A couple of years later, he declared his support for the globalisation
critics of Attac. What he shares with this movement is the conception
that the national state should be strengthened in order to control
social antagonisms. In his remarks on the Metzler case, he articulated
the anti-democratic, reactionary consequences of this perspective,
which is shared by many radical groups and trade union functionaries.
In the wake of September 11, 2001, he had already made clear
the close connection between strengthening the economic role of
the national state and antidemocratic conceptions. At that time,
Lafontaine wrote: Open societies need a strong state. Deregulation,
privatisation, the green card for engineers, pilot licences for
a few dollars, the right to settle for everybody and depleted
budgets undermine both domestic and international security. The
ridiculing of the state must end.
Now he has taken the next logical step. If the state is not
able to solve domestic and international problems by social improvements,
then the social democrat takes to brutal state repression.
See Also:
The German Social
Democratic Party: 140 years
[30 May 2003]
German police, judges
argue for admissibility of torture
[8 March 2003]
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