Civil Society Alliance: Reconciliation needs an apology and restorative justice - No Amnesty on Genocide!

Between 1904 and 1908 imperial Germany waged an atrocious and inhuman war of extermination against the Herero, Nama, Damara and San peoples in the former colony “German South-West Africa”, nowadays Republic of Namibia. According to the criteria of the UN Genocide Convention of 1948 the atrocities and massacres committed by German troops where a Genocide – the first of the 20th century.

Only with the Independence of Namibia in 1990 it became possible for the descendants of the victims and a free Namibian government to articulate with openness and self-determination their view on this history and to begin a process of dealing with this past. This includes the demand for “restorative justice” which is fundamental for the further development of Namibia. It is morally important for the national process of national reconciliation between the different peoples within Namibia and the descendants of German and other white settlers. On the material side this subject is closely linked with the still unresolved question of land reform in Namibia and a situation that condemns the descendants of the victims of the German genocide to a life in bitter poverty. This is to a great part due to the fact that the land and cattle of these peoples were robbed and given to white settlers mainly during the German colonial era.

As the legal follower of imperial Germany the German Federal Government refuses until today to apologize for this genocide. But without an apology there can be no sound basis for real reconciliation. In September 2011 the German Federal Government produced a scandal during the first repatriation of robbed human remains of this German genocide that are still kept in German archives until today. The Namibian delegation headed by a Namibian Minister was not officially welcomed according to international diplomatic standards by German authorities. Then the German government published a trivializing press release, refused to participate in a |+| panel discussion and missed once again an opportunity to apologize officially for the genocide. Instead it accused the Namibian delegation of having "compromised the good bi-lateral relations with Germany" and to
 have pursued a "hidden agenda" with their trip to Germany. Two victim’s committees reacted sharply 
to this allegation (|+| OCD-1904 and |+| NTC). In response to |+| questions in the German Parliament 
(Bundestag) the Federal Government pointed out the claim for restorative justice being the “hidden agenda” and accused “organizations in Germany” to have appeared 
as “joint hosts” and of having “openly incited” the Namibian delegation 
to put this issue on the agenda.

In December 2011 a conversation between Namibian president Hifikepunye Pohamba and the German Ambassador Egon Kochanke ended with an expulsion of the diplomat because of his insensitive behavior. The German-Namibian relations arrived at a temporary low point. (See |+| Article in Windhoek Observer)

At the Beginning of February 2012 Walter Lindner, Director-General for African Affairs in the German Federal Foreign Office, traveled to Namibia in order to talk to all stakeholders and to smooth the waters. Whilst he did apologize for the disrespectful reception of the Namibian delegation in September 2011, he however refused an apology for the German genocide. The Herero victims’ associations |+| OCD-1904 and |+| NTC underlined that they expect from the German Bundestag and Government a recognition of this genocide and an unconditional apology, ushering in a structured dialogue on restorative justice.

For many years, NGOs in Germany support these concerns. Therefore our civil society Alliance now supports the recent |+| motion introduced to the Bundestag "Acknowledging the German colonial crimes in former German South-West Africa as genocide and working towards restorative justice" (Printed Paper 17/8767). Meanwhile we regret that it has only the support of one parliamentary group and drass the urgent appeal to all political parties in the Bundestag to vote for this motion:

"Act now! Reconciliation between Germany and Namibia needs an apology and restorative justice for the genocide committed in the name of imperial Germany in the former colony German South-West Africa. The Bundestag must meet this responsibility and vote for a resolution for dialogue and reconciliation with the Republic of Namibia and the decendants of the affected communities of the Herero, Nama and Damara." (See also: |+| Resolution)

In the present motion we welcome especiallybesides an apology for the genocide, dialogue and restorative justice the proposed measures for a broad work on memory in Germany about its colonial history.

On the Initiative of the Namibian National Assembly a delegation of Namibian parliamentarians will sejourn at the Bundestag from 5 to 9 March 2012.This extended hand by Namibia for dialogue must not be rejected!

To mark the occasion of the returning of the mortal remains, the guests from Namibia have been presented with a |+| Book of Condolences, in which people from all over the world commemorate the dead. It is still online and open for condolence messages.

|+| Bundestag Motion "Acknowledging the German colonial crimes in former German South-West Africa as genocide and working towards restorative justice" (Drs. 17/8767) (|+| original Motion in German); |+| First debate (Speeches)

|+| Extensive Press Clipping (Namibian an German Press) & Links

|+| Book of Condolences

22. Tag der Erinnerung und Mahnung - Rassismus beim Namen nennen: Aktionstag gegen Rassismus, Neonazismus und Krieg, SO, 9. September 2012, 13-18 Uhr, Tempelhofer Flugfeld

Am Sonntag, den 9. September 2012 zwischen 13 und 18 Uhr findet der 22. Tag der Erinnerung und Mahnung auf dem Tempelhofer Feld | Columbiadamm (ehemaliger Flughafen Tempelhof) statt. Unter dem... |+| read article

Press Release: The Position of the OCD-1904 on the Genocide Motion in the German Bundestag

The OCD-1904 condemns the CDU/CSU and FDP coalition for voting against the motions tabled by the Left Party and the Social Democratic Party (SPD) and the Greens Party respectively. It was irresponsible for the coalition to vote against the wishes of the... |+| read article

PRESS RELEASE: German Federal Government refuses to apologise for genocide

Joint Press Release: AfricAvenir International - Afrika-Rat Berlin-Brandenburg - Arbeitskreis Panafrikanismus München (AKPM) - Artefakte//anti-humboldt - Berlin Postkolonial - Deutsch-Afrikanische Gesellschaft Berlin (DAFRIG) - Initiative Schwarze Menschen in... |+| read article

PRESSEMITTEILUNG: Bundesregierung verweigert Entschuldigung für Völkermord

Gemeinsame Pressemitteilung: AfricAvenir International - Afrika-Rat Berlin-Brandenburg - Arbeitskreis Panafrikanismus München (AKPM) - Artefakte//anti-humboldt - Berlin Postkolonial - Deutsch-Afrikanische Gesellschaft Berlin (DAFRIG) - Initiative Schwarze... |+| read article

PRESSEMITTEILUNG: Völkermord verjährt nicht! (Demo: 22.03., 17 Uhr, s.u.)

Deutschland muss endlich um Entschuldigung bitten für den Genozid in Namibia und die Nachfahren der Opfer entschädigen. Gemeinsame Pressemitteilung von: AfricAvenir International, Afrika-Rat Berlin Brandenburg, Afrika-Rat Nord, AFROTAK TV cyberNomads,... |+| read article

Letter by P.E.Muundjua (Ovaherero Genocide Committee) to the German NGO-Alliance, 18.03.2012

Dear Mr. Kopp, et al.
Thank you so much for your note of support to us of the Ovaherero Genocide Committee and to our other friends in the struggle for justice. I am writing to you and through you also to the members of your NGO... |+| read article

Editorial: Germany’s genocide in Namibia – Unbearable silence, or How not to deal with your colonial past

On 22 March 2012, the German parliament will debate a |+| motion to acknowledge its brutal 1904-08 genocide of the Nama and Herero peoples. Germany’s... |+| read article

Reinhart Kössler/Henning Melber: The genocide in Namibia (1904-08) and its consequences: Toward a culture of memory for a memory culture today – a German perspective

The repatriation of human remains more than a century after they were taken to Germany from Namibia has evoked painful memories of colonial wars in which primary African resistance was crushed, and genocide perpetrated (1904–08) in what was then the colony of... |+| read article

Peter H. Katjavivi: The significance of the repatriation of Namibian human skulls

Former Namibian Ambassador to Germany, Prof. Peter H. Katjavivi, who was instrumental in getting the repatriation process with Charité started, calls upon both Namibians and Germans to confront the past honestly as part of the process of recovering human... |+| read article

Kwame Opoku: Return of stolen skulls by Germany to Namibia: Closure of a horrible chapter?

Refuting in detail the arguments proffered by Germany on the questions of apology and compensation for the genocide of the Herero and the Nama, Dr Kwame Opoku notes that the Namibia-Germany case is being keenly observed by other African peoples and states... |+| read article

Casper W. Erichsen: Skullduggery and necrophilia in colonial Namibia

Names, dates, statistics, records, photographs – Namibia-based historian, Casper W. Erichsen, explains some of the factual evidence of the multiple atrocities that were part of the genocide in Namibia. At the end of the 19th century the rediscovery of... |+| read article

Horst Kleinschmidt: The absence of reconciliation

Namibian-born Horst Kleinschmidt provides challenging observations and personal family history linked to the colonial era. Urging both Germany and German-speaking Namibians to confront their past honestly, he offers examples of apologies made in similar... |+| read article

Alfredo Tjiurimo Hengari: The return of the Herero and Nama skulls: Coming to terms with a difficult history

In his analysis of the failure over more than two decades to deal with the genocide, Alfredo Tjiurimo Hengari looks at the changing attitudes of Namibia’s SWAPO-led government and the role of the Namibian media as well as Germany’s evasive political... |+| read article

Adetoun Küppers-Adebisi/Michael Küppers-Adebisi: Diaspora ‘Faces of the African Renaisance’ – New pan-African images out of Germany

In the critical reading of their exhibition ‘Faces of the African Renaisance’, Adetoun Küppers-Adebisi and Michael Küppers-Adebisi deconstruct German colonial genocide in Africa and contemporary, neo-colonial racism against people of African descent in... |+| read article

Reinhart Kössler/Henning Melber: German–Namibian denialism: How (not) to come to terms with the past

Largely unnoticed by most Namibians, the local German-language daily Allgemeine Zeitung provides a forum for colonial apologetics. Reinhart Kössler and Henning Melber examine recent comments and readers’ letters in this newspaper, exposing the reactionary... |+| read article

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