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German Neo-Nazi 'Kebab Murders' Cause Merkel Apology

German Neonazi Deaths

Posted: 02/23/2012 5:33 am

BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Angela Merkel apologized Thursday to the relatives of 10 people, mostly immigrants, believed to have been killed by a neo-Nazi group that eluded German authorities' detection for more than a decade.

The National Socialist Underground group — its name a clear reference to the Nazis' full name, the National Socialists — is suspected of killing eight people of Turkish origin and a Greek man between 2000 and 2006, as well as a policewoman in 2007.

The string of killings of small businessmen, including a florist, a tailor and fast-food stall owners — long known as the "kebab murders" — went unsolved for years, with authorities suspecting organized crime rather than politically motivated violence.

"The murders ... are a disgrace for our country," Merkel said during a memorial event at a Berlin concert house, attended by most of Germany's top officials and relatives of the victims. She pledged to do everything possible to clear up what happened.

Merkel acknowledged that, for a long time, few people imagined far-right terrorists could be behind the killings — "that led instead to a search for clues in the mafia and drug scene, or even among the families of the victims."

"For years, some relatives themselves unfairly faced suspicion — that is particularly oppressive," Merkel said. "I ask for forgiveness for that."

The neo-Nazi group's activities only came to light last November when two suspected founders, Uwe Boehnhardt and Uwe Mundlos, were found dead following an apparent murder-suicide as police closed in on them after a bank robbery, and a third alleged core member, Beate Zschaepe, turned herself in.

Police found the murdered policewoman's service weapon in a burning mobile home where the two bodies were found, then discovered a pistol used in the businessmen's killings at a burned-out apartment used by the group.

Investigators found copies of a propaganda video at the apartment, featuring pictures of the victims and a cartoon image of the Pink Panther standing next to a placard proclaiming "Germany Tour, 9th Turk Shot."

Merkel said she regularly has to view videos made by hostage-takers and the like, but "I have never yet in my work seen anything more inhuman."

Concern over far-right violence has flared periodically in Germany over the past two decades, but the country hasn't previously seen anything like the campaign of murder attributed to the National Socialist Underground.

"Reports about unscrupulous far-right perpetrators sometimes shake us, and they dominate the headlines for a few days," Merkel said. "But often enough we perceive such incidents as a side issue — we forget quickly, much too quickly."

Thursday's event, which was followed by a minute of silence across Germany, was initiated by former President Christian Wulff. Merkel stepped in after he resigned last week in a corruption scandal.

Semiya Simsek — the daughter of the first victim, florist Enver Simsek, who was shot in Nuremberg in 2000 — sharply criticized how authorities initially handled the killings, and said her mother had been suspected at one point.

"For 11 years, we couldn't even be victims with a clean conscience," she said.

"There was always this load on our lives that perhaps someone from our family could be responsible for the death of my father," she added. "And there was the other suspicion too: my father a criminal, a drug dealer?"

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BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Angela Merkel apologized Thursday to the relatives of 10 people, mostly immigrants, believed to have been killed by a neo-Nazi group that eluded German authorities' detectio...
BERLIN (AP) — Chancellor Angela Merkel apologized Thursday to the relatives of 10 people, mostly immigrants, believed to have been killed by a neo-Nazi group that eluded German authorities' detectio...
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jonthebru
Li 'dat!
11:35 PM on 02/25/2012
Cowards.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
07:50 PM on 02/25/2012
classy leadership. good example for the rest of the world.
Charles W Noble
rain drops make rivers flowing in the ocean
01:00 PM on 02/25/2012
Of course, this is wrong. But Turks need to develop the strength so that Germans work in their country rather than the other way around.
11:24 AM on 02/25/2012
Why can't the media just say the facts, these where Israeli terror groups or Neo-Nazi Zionists like Anders Brevik working in Germany who killed Muslims. Simple
01:00 PM on 02/24/2012
She's apologizing on behalf of Germany, ergo according to some people she must be weak and undermining the country.
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DevonTexas
Eternal Optimism
07:51 PM on 02/25/2012
and according to others, she's strong and supporting the country. You'll always have some that disagree.
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MaryJane
Corruptio optimi pessima
05:15 PM on 02/26/2012
He was channeling Insanitorium.
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09:32 AM on 02/24/2012
Interesting, I was in Germany last week and spoke a bit to a man in his twenties, my compulsion to talk to him being spurred on by the fact that he looked the image of their famous chancellor of the 1940’s albeit a more youthful and not necessarily of the same mannerisms as the one captured on those black and white reels that are constantly on discovery and history, anyway I did mention the resemblance and he did take a bit of offence.
This bolstered my view that most Germans don’t promote any association or subscription to this historic ideology which failed so badly when it was finally tried out.
It is surprising that this ideology still lives in some corners but then again conservatists find it hard to let go of the myriad of complex fantasies that they believe constitute a past and fading golden age so there is the possibility that 2 or 3 centuries of constitutional democracy is needed to bring conservationalistic fantasy to the point where this history would become unrepeatable.

BTW I've been described as a Fascist myself so pinch of salt here i reckon, its a comment I'm still pondering on :-)
10:38 AM on 02/24/2012
To me there seems to be a big divide in Germany when it comes to Neo-Nazis between East an West Germany. While the ideology is generally absolutely unacceptable in all of the country and this period is universally seen as the darkest time in German history, it seems to have survived in some dark corners in the East. Whenever there is news of some Neo-Nazi activity in Germany, it almost exclusively seems to come from the East. I think that's because while West Germany had to do some serious self reflection and soul searching after the war, the East, as a socialist country, saw itself as a bulwark against fascism that could only come from the West. Not that Neo-Nazis were accepted in the GDR, I think, but the public was perhaps more likely to look away. Then, after the reunification, East Germans suddenly had to face western realities such as immigration and diverse societies and in some places, long suppressed ideas surfaced again.

Ugly situation but I trust the Germans to deal with it.
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11:49 AM on 02/24/2012
Actually thanks, you just reminded me that locally there lives an east-german who has ss tattoos and a picture of Hitler on his arm, God, I’d blocked that out, but yes, years of communism did nothing to explain to eastern types how bad fascism was, after all, notwithstanding the fact that they saw themselves as a bulwark, they’re both slightly differing peas in a pod.
I think the treachery Hitler did in breaking the Russian non-aggression pact probably did more to divide them ideologically than any real differences in either Hitler or Stalins policies did (seems economic arrangements are the only real ones).
It’s interesting for me to ponder why eastern Europe, Russia included has so much of it today
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07:24 AM on 02/26/2012
Yes, you sum it up very well. There were quite a lot of problems, especially in East Germany, just after the Wall came down. I agree that this may well have been related to the very different ways in which the two parts of Germany dealt with their past -- but also, as you point out, perhaps related to the sheer confusion of suddenly being catapulted into an entirely new social structure and seeking convenient scapegoats.
08:44 AM on 02/24/2012
German media outlets have constantly avoided the use of the cyncical moniker "Kebab Murders" ever since the true background of these killings has been revealed, and its selection as "Unwort des Jahres 2011" (faux-pas word of the year 2011, or negative buzzword 2011) by the University of Frankfurt was met with broad consensus. Did you really have to put in your headline?
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11:55 AM on 02/26/2012
True, that. And well spotted.
12:16 PM on 02/26/2012
HP doesn't have the best headline writers....to wit the "Flame Fatale" headline about the horrific Honduras prison fire.
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DC Broughton
he who controls food, controls the world
08:42 AM on 02/24/2012
What? Racism and Bigotry aren't eradicated in this the year of of 2012 winter solstice and end of the Mayan Calendar. And in Germany no less, the fatherland. And with all those college students condemning Hitler when you get off the train in Berlin. Racism and Bigotry are promoted by all governments and private sector. If you hate another race, you'll support destroying it at all costs. It's how governments control the masses while corporations work with them to further enslave us spiritually, physically and financially. I hope our kids are smarter than we are.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
05:22 AM on 02/24/2012
The world can only congratulate Chancellor Merkel for making a frank apology for these crimes, although everyone understnads that the group who committed them is no more than a groupuscule whose message is soundly rejected by the German people!

The Germans have shown the value of apology, just as Obama has apologized for the excesses of small groups of American soldiers who commit atrocities or who simply engage in incredibly insensitive and stupid actions, like burning korans. Unbelievable as it may seem, Obama's apologies for these actions are mocked by some of the neuron-deficient elements of the American right!

Bravo Ms Merkel and thanks for showing us all a positive example!
08:30 AM on 02/24/2012
Excactly.

Both Merkel and Obama have the decency to address these issues correctly. It is unbelievable how some folks often complain politicians are hiding behind empty phrases, and when they finally speak out the truth, they get accused of being "weak" or whatever nonsense.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
09:36 AM on 02/24/2012
Good points, and always glad to read you, CC! -:)
10:53 AM on 02/24/2012
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Merkel and other conservative politicians share the responsibility in creating the anti-immigrant (lets say it, anti-muslim and anti-turk) envinronment that led to these murders. They have been constantly making a big issue about the presumed lack of "integration" of less than 5% of the German population. If you agitate the population, there will be a few nuts who will take matters in their hands.

Germany has been and is a dangerous place to make ethnic issues a matter of political debate
03:19 PM on 02/24/2012
An immigrant from Vietnam (an orphan adopted as an infant by a German couple) has been Vice Chancellor of Germany since May of last year. It seems that would have been newsworthy in the U.S., at least as a good human interest story, but nada. A Turkish-German is head of the powerful Green Party in Germany. If you only get news about Germany from U.S. sources, yes, you'll indeed think that Germany is a dangerous place vis-à-vis ethnic issues.
01:56 AM on 02/25/2012
The murders started long ago before Merkel was even in the office. Neo-Nazism is a completely different story than citizens with resentment against foreigners. Some things take time and both sides have made mistakes.
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bunty4321r
war veteran
04:55 AM on 02/24/2012
She forgot to mention that Israelis and German Neo-Nazi are step brothers of same father. It is because of the identical activities. However, Israelis avoid DNA tests.
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
03:24 AM on 02/24/2012
Neonazis in Russia and other countries should learn a lesson from this, the German Nazis feel that all non-Germans are inferior, not just non-whites and Jews. The Turks are white, but the Nazis hate them anyway.
07:45 PM on 02/23/2012
Angela has aged quite a bit since I last saw her in Hamburg in 2010.

Oleg
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dourdinlives
better to have loved and lost than never to have l
06:57 PM on 02/23/2012
let me break it down for you.after WW2 the germans were short of manpower for rebuilding the country. they invited turkish guest workers in.( Gastarbiteren) over the years, the turkish workers and their familys who are muslim, multiplied.islam does not assimulate or mix with anyone, or any culture that is not muslim.german fast food restaurants ( snellimbisses) were replaced with 'doner kebap stands." neighborhoods and parks and other spaces were taken over by the non assimulating turks.because of the nazi past, the average german will go out of his or her way to be accepting.some germans do feel put upon as the economy worsens, and neonazis, who don't like any foreigners take advantage of the friction.turkish males date, and are disrespecting of german women or any women who aren t muslim, but if a turkish girl or woman so much as talks to a non muslim, all hell breaks loose.this too adds to the resentment.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
05:24 AM on 02/24/2012
Interesting perspective, which dovetails with many other stories I've heard. I take it you have lived in Germany for a long time, right?
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dourdinlives
better to have loved and lost than never to have l
05:14 PM on 02/24/2012
naturlich!
08:43 AM on 02/24/2012
You have touched a ticklish subject ther with the "assimilation" comment, and you are right. However I must point out that proper assimilation of people from another culture does not happen overnight. It takes a very long time, maybe several generations to complete, and sometimes it just doesn't happen, depending on the circumstances.
We certainly can see the very examples here. We are called a "melting pot" but in reality we are a "stew pot". Only the members of a family, several generations removed from the original emigrants are barely assimilating today. Just as the Germany had Turkish neighborhoods, we had similar ones for Italians, Polish, Jews, Mexicans and many others, which did not help foster a faster assimilation. It takes a desire to assimilate. If it is not there then there is no assimilation.
09:39 AM on 02/24/2012
A very true, measured and insightful comment about the situation with muslim immigrants in much of Europe. Sadly, that's very rare. Mostly you see only fear mongering from the right and starry-eyed, naive multiculturalism from the left.
05:43 PM on 02/23/2012
"Kebab murders", just what were those journalists were thinking when they coined this phrase to describe those murdered innocent small-time businessmen?
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jennyopines
All generalizations are false, including this one.
12:52 AM on 02/24/2012
So killing Germans would be called "Kraut murders"?
06:29 PM on 02/27/2012
"Wieners murders" perhaps.
12:21 PM on 02/23/2012
She has the courage to admit that wrong was done and even the greater courage to apologize. Many a present-day 'leader' could learn something.
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CitizenPane
Why isn't phonetic spelled the way it sounds?
12:49 PM on 02/23/2012
I have to agree. Our politicians say outrageous things then just apologize - not ever taking responsibiltiy or really being held accountable.
YOKEL13
My cynicism exceeds my micro-bio.
02:20 PM on 02/23/2012
They have mastered the art of the "non-apology apology". This takes the form of "I am sorry if anyone was offended", which suggests the burden is on those who "may have been offended".