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Bavarian state parliament: Beate Zschäpe is to testify in the NSU investigative committee

2023-01-27T00:27:28.985Z


In 2018, Beate Zschäpe was sentenced to life imprisonment. Now the right-wing terrorist is to testify before the Bavarian NSU investigative committee.


Beate Zschäpe in the courtroom in Munich in July 2018

Photo: MICHAELA REHLE/ AFP

The legally convicted right-wing terrorist Beate Zschäpe has to appear as a witness before the NSU investigative committee of the Bavarian state parliament.

This was decided unanimously, said the committee chairman Toni Schuberl (Greens) of the German Press Agency in Munich.

A specific date for which Zschäpe will be invited as a witness was not initially set.

The terrorist cell "National Socialist Underground" (NSU) - Zschäpe, Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Böhnhardt - had been murdering through Germany for years from 2001 onwards.

Their victims were nine traders of Turkish and Greek origin and a German policewoman.

Mundlos and Böhnhardt also carried out two bomb attacks in Cologne, injuring dozens.

The two killed each other in 2011 to avoid being arrested – only then was the NSU exposed.

Zschäpe, the only survivor of the trio from Jena in Thuringia, was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2018 after more than five years of trial - as an accomplice, even if there was never any proof that she herself was at one of the crime scenes.

The Munich Higher Regional Court also determined the particular gravity of the guilt.

This means that an early release from prison after 15 years is almost impossible.

»She has nothing more to fear if she speaks openly«

The Federal Court of Justice (BGH) rejected an appeal by Zschäpe in August 2021. Last October, it also failed with a constitutional complaint before the Federal Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe.

The aim of the second NSU investigative committee in the Bavarian state parliament is, among other things, to clarify possible connections between the NSU and the Bavarian neo-Nazi scene.

The deputies are now also hoping for Zschäpe.

"We want to hear anyone who can give us answers to our questions," emphasized Committee Chairman Schuberl.

»The NSU caused endless suffering to so many people.

It can't be made up for,' said Schuberl.

»But Mrs. Zschäpe now has the chance to at least take away the nagging questions from the relatives by providing answers.

Only she can close the gaps.« Schuberl emphasized: »Ms. Zschäpe has been convicted and has nothing more to fear if she testifies openly.« Of course, there are no means of forcing Zschäpe to testify.

In the NSU trial, Zschäpe made written statements and spoke twice himself.

In writing, she admitted that she knew about the bank robberies of her friends Mundlos and Böhnhardt and that she set fire to the trio's last refugee apartment in Zwickau, Saxony.

But she only claims to have found out about the murders and attacks afterwards.

She later said in a brief statement that she regretted her "misconduct" and that she condemned what Mundlos and Böhnhardt "did to" the victims.

In her concluding words, Zschäpe said: "Please don't judge me on behalf of something that I neither wanted nor did."

The Munich Higher Regional Court, on the other hand, followed the argumentation of the federal prosecutor's office: Zschäpe very well "knew everything, supported everything and, in her own way, helped to control and cause things".

phw/dpa

Source: spiegel

All life articles on 2023-01-27

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