Oman Daily Observer

Surviving member of neo-nazi murder cell jailed for life

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MUNICH: The only surviving member of a German neo-nazi cell behind a shocking series of racist murders was sentenced on Wednesday to life in prison, capping one of the longest and politicall­y charged trials of the post-war period.

Beate Zschaepe, 43, was found guilty of 10 counts of murder for her complicity in the deadly shootings of nine Turkish and Greekborn immigrants and a German policewoma­n.

Zschaepe and her former lovers Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Boehnhardt had formed a militant clandestin­e group they called the National Socialist Undergroun­d (NSU).

The trio carried out the killings from 2000 and 2007, as well as two bombings and 15 bank robberies, before the two men died in an apparent suicide pact after a bungled bank heist in 2011.

The scope of the NSU’S crimes only came to light after the men’s deaths, when Zschaepe released a macabre confession video set to a Pink Panther cartoon theme.

Germany, which has long struggled to atone for its Nazi past, was shocked to learn that the series of killings, previously blamed by police on immigrant crime gangs, had in fact been committed by organised fascists from the country’s formerly communist east.

Judge Manfred Goetzl handed down the highest sentence citing the “exceptiona­l severity of the crime,” meaning Zschaepe could stay behind bars beyond Germany’s regular maximum 15-year prison term.

Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Twitter that the ruling meant Germany was “standing up to racist violence with the strength of the law,” and added that “the victims remain unforgotte­n”.

The mammoth trial had run since May 2013 and heard 800 witnesses and experts. Critics said many questions remain unanswered, including how the killers stayed undetected for so long and whether some undercover state informants knew of the NSU’S existence.

Turkey’s foreign ministry said the ruling “unfortunat­ely has not revealed in all its dimensions the background of the NSU murders as well as its links with the ‘deep state’ and intelligen­ce, and the real culprits have not been found”.

Gokay Sofuoglu, chairman of the Turkish community associatio­n in Germany, told news agency dpa that for his group’s members, “trust in public institutio­ns has been deeply shaken”.

In 2012, Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged that Germany would “do everything we can to clear up the murders”.

That same year, then head of Germany’s BFV domestic intelligen­ce agency, Heinz Fromm, was forced to resign when it emerged his service had shredded files related to the NSU suspects.

The chairman of a parliament­ary inquests into the case, Uli Groetsch, said it was clear that the three were “supported by a broad network of neonazis”.

On the eve of the verdict, Abdulkerim Simsek, son of the first NSU murder victim Enver Simsek, said: “I’m 100 per cent sure that there are still accomplice­s out there.”

The head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, Josef Schuster, urged the government to take the danger of rightwing extremism “more seriously”, especially after the far-right AFD party entered parliament last year, warning this threatened the “erosion of our democracy”.

Zschaepe has admitted to crimes such as helping plot bank robberies but insisted she only learnt of the murders after they were committed, and her defence immediatel­y filed an appeal.

The woman who grew up in the extremist skinhead subculture of postreunif­ication east Germany, last week told the court that racist ideology has “no meaning for me anymore”.

Judge Goetzl, painting a picture of the extremism that consumed the group, said Mundlos “hated the multicultu­ral melting pot in Germany” and had even developed an anti-semitic video game in which players shot Jews.

 ??  ?? Protesters hold up signs with pictures of the victims of neo-nazi cell National Socialist Undergroun­d before the proclamati­on of sentence in the trial against Beate Zschaepe on Wednesday. — AFP
Protesters hold up signs with pictures of the victims of neo-nazi cell National Socialist Undergroun­d before the proclamati­on of sentence in the trial against Beate Zschaepe on Wednesday. — AFP
 ??  ?? Beate Zschaepe waits in a courtroom before the proclamati­on of sentence.
— AFP
Beate Zschaepe waits in a courtroom before the proclamati­on of sentence. — AFP

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