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Germany's EU Law A Denial Of Genocide

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  • Germany's EU Law A Denial Of Genocide

    GERMANY'S EU LAW A DENIAL OF GENOCIDE
    By Toivo Ndjebela

    Informante
    http://www.informante.web.na: 8080/informante/index.php?option=com_content&t ask=view&id=3302&Itemid=100
    Dec 18 2008
    Namibia

    THE legislation proposed by Germany and approved by the European
    Union (EU) on 12 April 2007 appears contradictory and even smacks
    of hypocrisy.

    The law tabled by the Germans would allow prosecution of anyone guilty
    of "genocide denial" for questioning war crimes committed in either
    Africa or the Balkans during the past 20 years.

    The decision to limit the crime of "genocide denial" only to events
    that took place during the past 20 years has raised widespread
    suspicion.

    Furthermore, it is a slap in the face for many who are trying to
    address past human rights violations, particularly in Namibia.

    Under German-proposed law, people who question Europe's human rights
    violations from 20 years and beyond in Africa and the Balkans could
    be jailed for up to three years for "genocide denial".

    Even the International Herald Tribune reported just after the approval
    of the law that it was notable "for what it omitted".

    Most people would consider any law that outlaws "intentional conduct"
    that incites violence or hatred against a person's "race, colour,
    religion, descent or ethnic origin" a noble initiative.

    The decision to limit the law to the events of the past 20 years
    appears to be a disingenuous and cynical attempt by Germany to
    indemnify itself against atrocities committed during its colonial rule,
    particularly in Namibia.

    By imposing the 20-year limit, the Germans avoid the discomfort of
    having to embarrass powerful or important neighbours such as Russia
    over Stalin's atrocities in the Baltic countries, or the massacres
    of Armenians by Ottoman Turks.

    The scope of the law does not cover many specific historical events,
    but limits itself to recognising genocides that fall under the
    statutes, such as the mass killing of Jews during World War II and
    the massacre in Rwanda in 1994.

    Above all, justice under the new EU law is highly selective, allowing
    the EU to pick and choose what forms of "genocide denial" to outlaw,
    leaving wide latitude for applying double standards.

    It specifically excludes any justice for Namibia's Herero and Nama
    communities, who demand compensation for the killing of between 35,000
    to 105,000 of their ancestors from 1904 to 1908, in the genocide by
    German colonial forces in Namibia.

    The genocidal killings by German troops drove thousands of Ovaherero
    people into exile in Botswana, where many still remain after a
    100 years.

    In 2001, the Herero became the first ethnic group in Namibia to seek
    reparations from Germany for that country's colonial policies which
    fit the definition of genocide.

    The case was brought before a US federal court and the reparation
    claims were based on the procedures of the Alien Torts Claim Act of
    1789. The case is still ongoing, albeit with strong opposition from
    the Germans.

    International human rights bodies such as Amnesty International,
    Human Rights Watch and others have looked into violations of human
    rights in the past, and have at times called for justice to be done.

    Germany cannot escape scrutiny, and the proposal to have strict
    limits on the definition of "genocide denial", while making special
    provisions for the economically powerful Jewish community in its own
    national laws, is hardly surprising.

    The order by German colonial administrator in Namibia, Lothar von
    Trotha, for the execution of thousands of Namibians stands out as a
    classic example of why Germany would have a slim chance of escaping
    any possible prosecution.

    There is great condemnation of the envisaged law, not only in Africa
    but Europe too. In Europe, Lithuania and Estonia were among the nations
    against the proposal. They have pressed hard for the crimes committed
    by the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin to be brought into the scope
    of the law.

    Most EU member states have resisted the two nations' stance on the
    matter, but a compromise was drawn up last year, to include a political
    declaration condemning the mass murders committed under Stalin.

    According to the draft proposal "...each (EU) member state shall take
    the measures necessary to ensure that the following intentional conduct
    is punishable: 'publicly condoning, denying or grossly trivialising
    of crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes as
    defined in'... the Statute of the ICC."
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