Deutsche Welle, 5 March 2014
Afro-German
rights groups have once again called for an official apology for Germany's
colonial atrocities in Namibia. The demands were made during the handing over
of remains of Herero victims to a Namibian delegation.
On
Wednesday (05.03.2014) Berlin's Charite hospital handed over three complete
skeletons and 18 skulls to a delegation from Namibia. The remains are more than
a hundred years old and date back to the time of repressive German colonial
rule. The Herero and Nama ethnic group had rebelled against their German
colonial masters and the uprising was brutally put down and tens of thousands
were killed. Historians call it genocide, but successive German governments
have steadfastly declined to use that term, let alone contemplate reparations.
DW: How
significant is this return of remains of the Herero people for both Germany and
Namibia?
Henning
Melber: Actually it should be significant for both sides, but I am afraid it is
much more significant for the Namibian side, for the Herero and the Nama side,
than it is for the German side. The German side is very reluctant to recognize
what happened 110 years ago as genocide. This is despite the fact that a UN
report years ago that looked at the genocide of the twentieth century described
the actions against the Herero and Nama in what was then called German south
west Africa as the first genocide of the twentieth century. For the Namibians,
it's important and literally speaking its the skeletons coming out of the
closet. This is now the second transfer of skulls back to Namibia. The first
(transfer) happened one and half years ago and it ended in a huge embarrassment
because the German side was desperate to downplay the symbolic relevance of the
act and avoided an official apology for the genocide. It is very interesting to
see that the second transfer happened on a much lower scale .
Why does
the German government shy away from the term genocide in this particular
context?
First of
all the admission of the genocide might lead to demands for compensation. So
there is a reluctant to admit to genocide because there is no expiry date on
genocide and the victims could come up with demands for compensation. I think
it is a much more wider issue. Because if Germany would do that, it would be a
precedence where other colonial powers who committed genocides all over the
world in the colonial era, would be under pressure to come up with similar
recognition. It's a speculative thing but I assume that the Germans are
actually advised from other European countries not to recognize the act of
genocide.
What might
be the outcome if the German government were to apologize for what had happened
in what was then German South West Africa?
Legally
speaking that would open the doors for subsequent demands. An official apology
offered would be considered in legal terms as an admission of guilt. That is
also why in 2004, Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul, the then Social Democrat minister
for development attended the 100 years ceremony of the battle in Namibia, but
did not explicitly offer an apology but asked for forgiveness. When asked she
said it was an apology, but legally speaking, as others pointed out it was not
in legal terms an apology. T his is what the German government has always
avoided.
Can you see
any future German government adopting a different stance on this issue?
It's
interesting that a year ago, there were two drafts discussed in the German
Bundestag, one by the Left Party and the other by the Social Democratic and
Green parties. Both went much further than anything that any government before
had adopted as an official line. The only difference was that the Left Party
asked also for compensation and the other submission by the Social Democratic
and the Green Party stopped short of that but also asked for an official
apology. So now one of those two parties is in the great coalition government.
And Actually it is very interesting question to the Social Democratic coalition
partner in that government how much they are loyal to the submission they had
put to the Bundestag a year ago.
Henning
Melber is a German political scientist specializing in Namibia.
Interview: Mark Caldwell.

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