The Phnom Penh Post

Skulls from Africa held in Germany

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MORE than 1,000 skulls and bones belonging to east Africans and brought to Germany for racial “scientific” research during the colonial era are still in storage in Berlin, a media report said on Tuesday.

Public broadcaste­r ARD said it had obtained lists of the human remains that are still held by the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation, which administer­s the capital’s state museums.

Most of the skulls and bones are marked as stemming from Germany’s former East African colonies, including items from Rwanda and Tanzania.

Some of the human remains, kept at the Foundation’s main storage facility, came from insurgents who had been decapitate­d by German troops.

Asked about the items, the foundation’s chief, Hermann Parzinger, told ARD that his organisati­on “has no problem with returning these things”.

Germany has in recent years handed back 20 skulls belonging to indigenous Namibians.

The skulls are among an estimated 300 taken to Germany after a slaughter of indigenous Namibians during an anticoloni­al uprising in what was then called South West Africa, which Berlin ruled from 1884 to 1915.

The skulls gathered dust in the German archives until 2008, when ARD reported that they were still kept at the Medical History Museum of the Charite hospital in Berlin, and at Freiburg University in the southwest.

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