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Ex-RAF terrorists: Garweg and dust in Berlin?

2024-02-29T20:13:40.003Z

Highlights: Ex-RAF terrorists: Garweg and dust in Berlin?. In December 2023, while searching for Daniela Klette, the podcast “Legion” from the broadcasters NDR and RBB discovered a woman in dance groups in Berlin who looked deceptively similar to her. For decades, the left-wing extremist organization Red Army Faction (RAF) was the epitome of terror and murder in the west of still divided Germany. “The fact that an RAF terrorist can live in the middle of Berlin undetected and unmolested for 20 years is scary to me,” said Jörg Schleyer.



As of: February 29, 2024, 9:05 p.m

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A special trailer with a special safety chest (blue, round lid) is on Sebastianstrasse.

© Annette Riedl/dpa

After Daniela Klette's arrest, the authorities kept a low profile - probably also because there was no trace of her accomplices.

Ernst-Volker Staub and Burkhard Garweg could be very close by.

Berlin/Hannover - It was the second shock for her housemates in Berlin-Kreuzberg on Wednesday: first they found out that their friendly neighbor with the gray braid was an RAF terrorist who had been wanted for more than 30 years.

Then the residents of the seven-story apartment building on Sebastianstrasse had to leave their apartments on orders from the police - for their own safety.

Because “heavy war weapons” were discovered at Daniela Klette’s home, as a spokesman for the Verden public prosecutor’s office said on Thursday.

An intensive search is now underway for their accomplices Ernst-Volker Staub and Burkhard Garweg.

The investigators suspect that the two could also be in Berlin.

The investigators do not know the addresses of those they are looking for.

But: Their apartments could “pose a potential threat to the population,” they warn with regard to the weapons and explosives found near Klette.

The LKA Lower Saxony made it clear in the evening that there was no concrete threat to the city of Berlin.

This did not originate from the two objects that were initially classified as dangerous and which could not be discussed in more detail for tactical reasons.

However, it cannot be ruled out that the suspected robbers Staub and Garweg could pose a danger.

The authorities asked citizens on Thursday afternoon to support the police in the search.

The warning comes for a reason.

The investigators had previously made a dangerous discovery in Klette's home.

They discovered, among other things, explosives, a rocket-propelled grenade and several weapons.

These include a Kalashnikov, a submachine gun and a handgun with ammunition.

According to the investigators, it is reasonable to assume that Staub and Garweg could also have stashed weapons and explosives.

On Wednesday evening, forensic scientists carried a grenade out of Klette's home, and on Thursday morning another apparently dangerous object was carried out and loaded into a special vehicle.

A third discovery followed later, as dpa reporters observed.

“The grenades and explosives were transported away using special transport technology and rendered harmless in a secured location,” the investigators then confirmed.

Neighbors from a house opposite also had to leave their apartments and the street was cordoned off.

The closure was only lifted early on Thursday morning and residents were able to return.

For decades, the left-wing extremist organization Red Army Faction (RAF) was the epitome of terror and murder in the west of still divided Germany.

Relatives of the victims criticized the authorities after Klette's arrest.

“The fact that an RAF terrorist can live in the middle of Berlin undetected and unmolested by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution for 20 years is scary to me,” said Jörg Schleyer to “Bild”.

Politicians must examine this circumstance and “think” about the consequences.

The 70-year-old is the youngest son of employer president Hanns Martin Schleyer, who was murdered by the RAF in 1977.

Lower Saxony's Interior Minister Daniela Behrens (SPD) celebrated Klette's arrest on Monday evening by investigators from the Lower Saxony State Criminal Police Office (LKA) as a "milestone in German criminal history".

But why couldn't the left-wing terrorist be tracked down sooner?

In December 2023, while searching for Daniela Klette, the podcast “Legion” from the broadcasters NDR and RBB discovered a woman in dance groups in Berlin who looked deceptively similar to her.

For the podcast, Michael Colborne from the research collective “Bellingcat” researched using facial recognition software.

The basis was mugshots of the young Burdock.

Colborne told the dpa on Thursday that it only took him 30 minutes to determine that the photos on the website of a Berlin capoeira studio most likely showed Daniela Klette.

“The fact that it took someone like me, who doesn’t speak German, such a short time to find a lead that led directly to Daniela Klette makes me wonder how she was able to evade law enforcement for 30 years,” criticized the Canadian Journalist.

The Lower Saxony State Criminal Police Office initially did not comment on a possible search using facial recognition software or on the question of whether this would even be legally permissible.

The EU General Data Protection Regulation prohibits the processing of biometric data without explicit consent.

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Federal police experiments with facial recognition have led to excellent results, said the federal chairman of the German Police Union (DPolG), Rainer Wendt, at the request of the German Press Agency (dpa).

However, there is no legal authority to use the technology to search for dangerous perpetrators, terrorists or fugitives.

“At the moment, investigators are not allowed to do that, that should change,” demanded the police unionist.

The Federal Prosecutor's Office in Karlsruhe is responsible for solving the murders of the left-wing terrorist organization.

Michael Buback, son of Federal Prosecutor General Siegfried Buback, who was killed in 1977, criticized in the Berlin “Tagesspiegel” that the memory of the RAF does not play a special role in collective memory.

“Since only one of the 34 RAF murders has been fully solved, a larger number of terrorist murderers are likely to still be free,” said the 79-year-old to the Berlin “Tagesspiegel”.

“I can’t give a number because far too much is still unknown.”

According to the Federal Prosecutor's Office, there are still arrest warrants against Klette.

She is being investigated for causing an explosive explosion and attempted murder in crimes that occurred in the early 1990s.

The 65-year-old is currently in custody for six armed robberies on money transporters and supermarkets in Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia between 1999 and 2016. She is remaining silent about the allegations, said a spokesman for the Verden public prosecutor's office on Thursday.

Specifically, according to the Verden public prosecutor's office, Burdock, Staub and Garweg are said to be responsible for crimes in Stuhr, Wolfsburg, Hildesheim, Cremlingen, Bochum and Duisburg.

The trio is also accused of attempted murder because shots were allegedly fired during robberies.

Garweg, Burdock and Staub belong to the so-called third generation of the RAF.

During their active time, the then Deutsche Bank boss Alfred Herrhausen (1989) and Treuhand boss Detlev Karsten Rohwedder (1991) were murdered and Herrhausen's driver was seriously injured.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-29

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