Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Greece makes fresh WWII reparation claims from Germany

Greece has renewed its calls for negotiatio­ns with Germany on reparation­s for damage caused in World War II. "These demands are valid and active," a Greek official said.

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The government in Athens has revived its demand for talks with Germany on wartime reparation­s just ahead of the 80th anniversar­y of the invasion of Greece by German troops in World War II.

"The question remains open until our demands are met. These demands are valid and active, and they will be asserted by any means," Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Alexandros Papaioanno­u told the German news agency DPA.

Greece last made an official call for negotiatio­ns in 2019, under leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras. But the government of current conservati­ve Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitso

takis said in January 2020 that Athens still considered the issue an open one, although it had so far refrained from pressuring Berlin on the matter.

Billions in damage

The cost of the damage caused by Nazi Germany in Greece during the war has been estimated at €289 billion ($339 billion) by a Greek parliament­ary commission. That amount includes a loan that Greece was

forced to grant the German central bank.

After invading Greece on April 6, 1941, German armed forces went on to carry out numerous massacres in the country, with tens of thousands of civilians dying during the conflict.

Germany has said it considers the issue to have been resolved by the so-called Two Plus Four Agreement, signed in 1990, which allowed the united

Germany to become fully sovereign the following year. The signatorie­s to the treaty were the former East and West Germanies and the former occupying powers, France, the US, Britain and the Soviet Union.

Reparation­s were not explicitly mentioned in the document. Countries such as Greece and Poland that had been invaded by Germany in the war were not included in the negotiatio­ns for the treaty.

A Bundestag report in 2019 found that Greece's claims did have legal weight, calling the German government's position "acceptable" but "by no means compulsory" under internatio­nal law.

Domestic criticism

Germany's Green and Left parties have strongly criticized the government's refusal to be drawn into negotiatio­ns. At a recent parliament­ary debate on the invasion that took place in the presence of Greek Ambas

sador Maria Marinaki, they called for a change of course, but the call was rejected.

The vice president of the Bundestag, the Greens' Claudia Roth, said she was ashamed of Germany's attitude, while Left lawmaker Heike Hänsel called the government's position "neither morally nor legally acceptable."

The German government says that, rather than paying reparation­s, it wants to promote reconcilia­tion with Greece by means of commemorat­ive and educationa­l projects.

tj/mm (dpa, KNA)

 ??  ?? Nazi Germany caused much death and great destructio­n in Greece during World War II
Nazi Germany caused much death and great destructio­n in Greece during World War II
 ??  ?? Nazi Germany also invaded British-held Crete in May 1941
Nazi Germany also invaded British-held Crete in May 1941

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