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German: Interior Minister Schilys parting shota
blatant attack on freedom of the press
By Justus Leicht
20 October 2005
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Just prior to terminating his term in office, Germanys
interior minister Otto Schily (Social Democratic PartySPD)
launched another attack on a fundamental democratic right: this
time fundamentally challenging the right to a free press. If Schily
had his way, every newspaper that uncovers abuses within the state
apparatus would have to reckon with police raids of their editorial
offices and seizure of their documents, while any journalist who
reveals a political scandal has to expect imprisonment.
The issue was sparked off by an article in the April edition
of the magazine Cicero, which could by no means be regarded
as an especially critical piece of journalism, but nevertheless
dealt with a topic of considerable public interest. Under the
heading The most dangerous man in the world, reporter
Bruno Schirra wrote an article on the Abu Mussab al Zarqawi.
He based his article on information from the Jordanian and
Western secret services, including a 125-page-long dossier drawn
up by the German Criminal Investigation Office (BKA), which the
article quotes in detail. The dossier claims that Zarqawi is being
supported by Iran and is planning terrorist attacks with chemical
weapons in Europe. Schirra writes that the dossier is stamped
classified materialonly for official use. This
is the lowest security classification and means that the contents
of the document are not of a sensitive nature.
Several weeks prior to the publication of the article, the
reporter is alleged to have informed the BKA of his plans and
asked for a discussion with the agency. In the event, the meeting
between the two sides only eventually took place after the appearance
of the article. In June, the BKA issued a writ against Schirra
on the grounds of betraying official secrets according
to section 353b of the German penal code (StGB) and began to look
(unsuccessfully) for the informant in its ranks.
Finally, in the middle of September, the police carried out
a search of the editorial offices of Cicero in Potsdam
and at the same time raided the private dwelling of Schirra in
Berlin. The legal basis for the raids was a writ issued by the
Potsdam district court passed at the request of the public prosecutors
office, which accuses Cicero and Schirra of being accessories
to the betrayal of official secrets. The BKA dossier in
question was not found; however, the entire disk of Schirras
computer in the editorial rooms was copied and 15 crates of files,
portfolios and document foldersSchirras complete private
archivewas confiscated after it had been accidentally
found in the cellar of the journalist.
According to section 353b StGB, such a criminal investigation
requires the authorisation of the interior ministry headed by
Otto Schily, which gave the green light.
Two weeks later, not only did Schily justify the action of
his ministry at the annual congress of the German newspaper publishers
association, he elevated it to a matter of state. In future, the
state would pursue all journalists who quoted from secret documents
and, with the help of the law, impose discretion with regard
to the state.
Schily aggressively rejected criticism from media concerns,
and even from prominent representatives of his own party and its
coalition partner the Green Party. He described such critics as
just a few teasers whose stupid gossip
cannot be outdone for its foolishness. In an interview
with the magazine Der Spiegel, he compared journalists
who were in the possession of secret documents with receivers
of stolen goods. The state has a requirement to protect
its own sphere, Schily said, and went on to completely defend
the searches carried out of Cicero and Schirra. He also
remained adamant in his stance during a parliamentary hearing
convened last week to discuss the issue.
A close look at the facts, however, indicates that the searches
were illegal. On the one hand, the German Constitutional Court
stressed more than 40 years ago that searches on the basis of
suspicion of being an accessory could not be used as a pretext
to detect leaks in the state apparatus. The protection of informants
is an indispensable component of press freedom. On the other hand,
German criminal code also expressly states that any confiscation
carried out on the basis of the suspicion of being an accessory
must be in accordance with the fundamental right of press freedom.
The special mention of the fundamental right in the legal text
is unusual. Its inclusion is aimed at effectively combating
any danger of overemphasising the interests of the prosecution
by legislators.
In the meantime, the real meaning of imposing discretion
with regard to the state has been revealed. The public prosecutors
office in Berlin has instigated its own criminal procedures against
Schirra, based on the accidental find in his cellar.
Once again, the accusation is accessory to the betrayal
of official secrets. This time, the accusation is based
on documents concerning a series of scandals that have shaken
the German Republic over the past decadethe Leuna affair
in East Germany, deliveries of military hardware, and the donation
scandal that hit the Christian Democratic Union. Schirra had formerly
reported on all of these scandals when he worked as a reporter
for the paper Die Zeit. Now, it will be a punishable offence
to uncover such affairs.
The role played by Schily in this affair is still not completely
clear. Was it limited to merely taking responsibility for the
authorisation for prosecution? According to information in Die
Welt, the public prosecutor who ordered the searches maintained
telephone contact for several hoursprobably with his superiors
in Potsdamstarting from the time when officials first entered
Schirras cellar. At the parliamentary hearing, the interior
minister was reluctant to give a clear answer to the question
of whether, in light of the incriminating documents found in the
cellar, the public prosecutor also maintained contact with the
BKA or sources in the interior ministry itself. He neither
admitted nor disclaimed anything, just threw the question back,
Die Welt wrote.
The media expert Johannes Ludwig assumes that Schily went so
far as to exert pressure. He told the online magazine Telepolis:
Some years ago, the general prosecutors office in
Germany adopted guidelines to no longer carry out such actions
against media representatives. First of all, suspicion of being
an accessory could never be properly confirmed. Secondly, police
actions against the press always provoke negative public reactions.
And on a long-term basis, that harms the reputation and thus effectiveness
of the public prosecutors offices.... [A]bove the public
prosecutor is the senior public prosecutor, over him the general
prosecutorand then all that remains is ministry level. If
a minister just thinks out loud, then [it] often leads on the
lower levels to a kind of rush to obey, because nobody wants to
jeopardise their career. In the case in question it is obvious
that Otto Schily exerted pressure.
The minister was evidently anxious to make some sort of breakthrough,
and the action being undertaken by the public prosecutors
office in Berlin shows that he partially succeeded. Perhaps it
is daily practice for journalists to report from confidential
documents, according to Frank Thiel, speaker for the Berlin public
prosecutors office, speaking to the taz newspaper,
nevertheless it remains punishable. He even went on
to make the comparison: In the building industry, it is
also usual to pay bribesbut that is also punishable.
The law that has been utilised by Schily, state lawyers and
the police is thoroughly undemocratic. According to its text,
state action is required whenever official secrets are revealed
and thus important public interests endangered. This
refers not to the interests of the public, but on the contrary,
according to the statutes, it is necessary to prevent any
shaking of public confidence in the impartiality, incorruptibility
and effectiveness of public administration.
Not coincidentally, the section of the statutes concerned (353b)
was inserted in 1936 by the Nazis. Although Germany does not confront
imminent fascism, the revelation of official abuses is once again
regarded by powerful sections of the state apparatus as a punishable
offence.
See Also:
What can be expected from Germany's grand
coalition?
[19 October 2005]
Right-wing Social Democrat Steinbrück
named finance minister in German grand coalition
[15 October 2005]
Germany: Grand Coalition under Chancellor
Merkel
A government in defiance of the voters will
[12 October 2005]
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