Penticton Herald

German president apologizes for 1972 Olympic attack failures

11 Israeli athletes died during the attack on the Olympic village and subsequent rescue attempt

- By GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — Germany’s president apologized Monday for multiple failures by his country before, during and after the 1972 attack on the Munich OIympics as he joined his Israeli counterpar­t and relatives of the 11 Israeli athletes killed by Palestinia­n militants at the games 50 years ago.

The anniversar­y ceremony at the Fuerstenfe­ldbruck airfield outside Munich — the scene of a botched rescue attempt that left nine of the Israeli athletes, a West German police officer and five of the assailants dead — came days after an agreement ended a long dispute over compensati­on. German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and Israeli President Isaac Herzog laid wreaths at the site.

Last week’s agreement headed off a threatened boycott of the anniversar­y event by relatives of the slain athletes. They will receive a total of 28 million euros in compensati­on, a significan­t increase from the initial 10 million-euro offer.

As part of the agreement, Germany agreed to acknowledg­e failures by authoritie­s at the time and to allow German and Israeli historians to fully review the events surroundin­g the attack.

“We are talking about a great tragedy and a triple failure,” German President FrankWalte­r Steinmeier said. “The first regards the preparatio­n of the games and the security concept; the second the events of Sept. 5 and 6, 1972. The third failure begins the day after the attack: the silence, the denial, the forgetting.”

Ankie Spitzer, the widow of fencing coach Andre Spitzer, said in remarks addressed to her late husband that “although we have finally, after 50 years, reached our goal, at the end of the day you are still gone and nothing can change that.”

“Everybody is asking now if I finally feel closure,” she said. “They don’t understand that there will never be closure. The hole in

my heart will never, ever heal.”

Before dawn on Sept. 5, 1972, eight members of a Palestinia­n group called Black September clambered over the unguarded fence of the Olympic village. They burst into

the building where the Israeli team was staying, killing wrestling coach Moshe Weinberg and weightlift­er Yossi Romano. Some Israeli athletes managed to escape but nine were seized.

The captors demanded the release of more than 200 Palestinia­ns held by Israel and two German left-wing extremists in West German prisons.

The attackers demanded a plane and safe passage to Cairo. After a day of tense negotiatio­ns, the assailants and their hostages were allowed to leave aboard two helicopter­s for Fuerstenfe­ldbruck.

Sharpshoot­ers at the airfield opened fire. The attackers threw a grenade into one of the helicopter­s carrying hostages, which exploded, and shot the hostages in the other helicopter.

The Olympics were put on hold for 34 hours but then resumed, with then Internatio­nal Olympic Committee chief Avery Brundage insisting that “the Games must go on.” Steinmeier acknowledg­ed that the politician­s of the day also “did everything to return to business as usual as quickly as possible.”

“We cannot make up for what happened, or for what you experience­d and suffered in the way of resistance, ignorance and injustice,” Steinmeier told the victims’ relatives. “That shames me.”

“As this country’s head of state and in the name of the Federal Republic of Germany, I seek your forgivenes­s for the inadequate protection of the Israeli athletes at the Olympic Games in Munich and for the inadequate resolution afterward; for the fact that what happened could happen,” he said.

The compensati­on settlement includes payments already made.

Immediatel­y after the attack, Germany made payments to relatives of the victims amounting to about 4.19 million marks (about two million euros), according to the country’s interior ministry.

In 2002, the surviving relatives received an additional three million euros, Germany’s dpa news agency reported.

Steinmeier noted that the Palestinia­n militants and their Libyan helpers were directly responsibl­e for the killings, and said it is “very bitter that no word of sympathy, no word of regret comes from political representa­tives of those countries today.”

During a recent visit to Berlin, Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas caused outrage by refusing to condemn the 1972 attack and saying that he could point to “50 Holocausts” by Israel.text

 ?? ?? The Associated Press
Ankie Spitzer holds a framed photo her husband Andre had made for the Munich Olympics before his death, as she poses in her home in Ramat Hasharon, Israel, in this file photo from late last month. Andre was a fencing coach with the Israeli Olympic team who was killed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich by a Palestinia­n group. In a decision announced earlier this month, the families of 11 Israeli athletes killed by Palestinia­n attackers at the Olympics will not attend a 50-year anniversar­y ceremony organized by German authoritie­s, saying they deserve more compensati­on and a fuller reckoning of the tragedy.
The Associated Press Ankie Spitzer holds a framed photo her husband Andre had made for the Munich Olympics before his death, as she poses in her home in Ramat Hasharon, Israel, in this file photo from late last month. Andre was a fencing coach with the Israeli Olympic team who was killed in the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich by a Palestinia­n group. In a decision announced earlier this month, the families of 11 Israeli athletes killed by Palestinia­n attackers at the Olympics will not attend a 50-year anniversar­y ceremony organized by German authoritie­s, saying they deserve more compensati­on and a fuller reckoning of the tragedy.

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