|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
Berlin district council meeting upholds ban on PSG meeting
Councillor admits decision politically motivated
By our reporter
27 April 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
On Wednesday evening, April 26, the head councillor for the
Berlin district of Tempelhof-Schöneberg, Bernd Krömer
(CDU), openly admitted that the decision to close the districts
city hall on May 1 was politically motivated and aimed at preventing
the meeting planned for that day by the Partei für Soziale
Glechheit (Socialist Equality Party, PSG). A session of the council
voted to uphold the ban on the PSGs meeting.
The PSG had first lodged its application on March 30 requesting
a room in the Schöneberg city hall for a public lecture to
be held under the title In Defence of Leon Trotsky: A Reply
to the Post-Soviet School of Falsification. The city hall
is normally open throughout the year and has invariably been open
on May Day in past years. The PSG application was then confirmed
by telephone by the city hall officer responsible for room bookings.
More than two weeks later, on April 17, a meeting of the district
council then decided to close the city hall on May 1, thereby
preventing the PSG meeting from going ahead.
The PSG has taken immediate legal action aimed at reversing
the district council decision, which it regards as an attempt
to prevent its May Day meeting, thereby violating the PSGs
right to assembly and for equal treatment with all other political
organisations.
The city hall also features an exhibition devoted to the life
of the SPD politician Willy Brandt, which is open throughout the
year. Groups of visitors had applied to visit the exhibition on
May 1, but it has now been announced that the exhibition will
be closed on that dayan obvious move to avoid the impression
that the closure of the hall was aimed solely at the PSG.
The district council meeting (BVV), which consists of 60 elected
delegates (Social Democratic Party, SPD 19; Christian Democratic
Union CDU, 17; the Greens, 10; FDP, 4; the Greys, 3; and the Left
Party/PDS and Election Alternative group (WASG), both with one
delegate) was held at the city hall on Wednesday. The session
confirmed that the decision made against the PSG meeting was politically
motivated.
Prior to the meeting, the BVV delegate from the WASG, Christoph
Nitschke, had put forward a motion that the issue of the PSG room
application be discussed as an urgent item on the agenda of the
BVV meeting. The motion to discuss the issue was agreed, and a
debate correspondingly took place at the end of the meeting.
Also prior to the meeting, PSG members distributed a letter
to those delegates attending the BVV session that was held in
one of the large assembly halls in the Schöneberg city hall.
The letter contained an account of the events leading up to the
decision to close the hall on May 1.
The PSG letter to the BVV delegates described the chain of
events leading up to the decision to close the city hall on May
Day and stated:
We ask you at todays meeting to reject the action
taken by town councillor Krömer (CDU) and call upon the district
office to confirm and agree the meeting which was booked by the
PSG four weeks ago.
We appeal to your democratic sense of responsibility!
It cannot be allowed that a party be suppressed with
bureaucratic methods and denied its fundamental right to freedom
of assembly and equal treatment.
We all live in a country in which bureaucratic arbitrariness
and the suppression of democratic rights had devastating consequences
in the past and cannot be tolerated today.
You, as elected district officers, bear the responsibility
to prevent the autocratic behaviour of a few individual town councillors
and guarantee democratic relations in the district office.
Christoph Nitschke introduced the discussion and drew attention
to the fact that an impartial and objective evaluation of the
facts and the chain of events made clear that the first-ever closure
of the city hall on the forthcoming May 1 was directly bound up
with efforts to prevent the planned PSG meeting from taking place.
Following Nitchkes remarks, other BVV delegates made
derogatory comments about the application made by the PSG, making
clear their contempt for basic democratic rights. Contributions
made by representatives of the SPD and CDU were aimed at insulting
the PSG and mocking a party that did not belong to the corrupt
establishment in the city hall, but dared to book a room on its
premises. According to these forces, the PSG has no right to free
assembly.
A delegate from the SPD asked whether this left-wing
group had provided alternative dates and whether these had
also been rejected, while another CDU delegate queried why a
small, left-wing group needed to hold such a meeting in
the tradition-steeped Schöneberg city hall on a topic in
which hardly anyone was interested. Then town councillor Bernd
Krömer (CDU) took the floor.
As Krömer took up his position to speak, the chairman
of the PSG, Ulrich Rippert, who was attending the meeting as a
visitor, requested permission to speak to the assembled delegates.
Ripperts request was turned down on several occasions with
the reference to the official agenda for the meeting. Krömer
then began with the words:
I do not have to hide behind the official agenda. There
is an established practice at the Schöneberg city hall and
the district office for the allocation of rooms, which requires
that we actually check the applications by certain groups to the
district office and only then make a decision....
It is not a question of whether we are dealing here with
any sectarian group, which belongs to the Fourth International
and is left-wing extremist, and whose influence is pretty much
about zero. That does not bother us....
The district office had in fact dealt with this question
on April 17, and in coordination with our colleagues we are of
the opinion that the city hall does not have to be kept open for
such a left-wing troupe. In addition, I stress that this meeting
does not automatically acquire premises in the city hall. We then
decided on the closure. I am absolutely in agreement with thisit
is correct, it is the first time the city hall has been closed....
I am in fact in agreement with the position put by [another
delegate, whose name is unclear] who declared that she did not
see why it was necessary for such a troupe to hold its meeting
in Schöneberg city hall on May 1 and for the hall to be kept
open on a public holiday. The meeting can also take place inI
will not now say in a telephone boxbut in some other place....
Following the statements by councillor Krömer, which made
absolutely clear that the resolution agreed by the district office
was a political decision directed against the PSG, Christoph Nitschke
spoke once more: Mr. Krömer, regarding what you have
just said, the issue here is not the size or influence of a party.
It is about a basic democratic right and equal treatment. So far
as I understood, you evidently allocate rooms on the basis of
the party programmes....
Whereupon Bernd Krömer answered: There are obviously
uses which are politically and publicly relevant and which are
desirable for the district. Of course, we have nothing to criticise
in applications for rooms made by the SPD, the CDU, the Greens,
the FDP or the WASG. It is naturally different in the case of
this left-wing extremist party. In such a case we have to look
more closely....
Krömers statement at this point in the BVV session
was unequivocal and only served to confirm that the decision to
close the city hall on May 1 was taken precisely to prevent the
meeting planned by the PSG from taking place. Following Krömers
intervention, a vote was taken at which the majority of BVV delegates
then decided to support his decision and confirm the closure of
the city hall. During the coming days, the PSG intends to intensify
its political and legal campaign to reverse this blatant attack
on its constitutional rights.
See Also:
PSG takes legal action against Berlin
district office over meeting ban
[26 April 2007]
Berlin district office cancels meeting
room for PSG meeting on May 1
[23 April 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |