,,Expellees" wanted
The European Network against Expulsions is due to be
launched by representatives of the governments of Germany,
Austria, Hungary, Poland and Slovakia in Warsaw on
Wednesday, 2 February. This was confirmed to
german-foreign-policy.com by Christina Weiss, a spokeswoman
for the Federal Commissioner for Culture and the Media. The
Network is intended to function initially ,,at an
academic level" and to link together research
institutes, museums and other institutions concerned with
,,issues of war and its consequences". Critics
suggest that the project is intended to create an
equivalence between the resettlement of Germans and crimes
against humanity such as the persecution of gypsies (Roma)
in Kosovo, and the Armenian genocide, and to declare it,
too, to be an ,,injustice". The fact is that the
resettlements were decided upon by the victors of the Second
World War, and cannot be contested in international law.
When asked if the German ,,expellees"'
associations could be involved in the Network, which is
intended to ,,have an impact on the public", the
Commissioner's spokeswoman replied, ,,That is actually
what we want."
Rejection
As confirmed to german-foreign-policy.com by Jan Sechter,
the deputy to the Czech ambassador to Berlin, the Czech
government will not participate in building up the network.
He explained that, after 15 years of bilateral talks on the
resettlement of the Germans there was no need for further
discussions. As long ago as the joint statement with the
Czechs of 21 January 1997, the German government had in fact
promised that relations between the two countries would
,,not be burdened by political and legal issues from the
past" - an undertaking that it has subsequently
repeatedly modified and undermined. It is clear from
Sechter's statement that the German government is also not
prepared to involve the European powers who guaranteed the
Potsdam Treaty any say in the establishment of the
,,European Network against
Expulsions".1) He also confirmed that
Prague had asked Berlin and Warsaw to involve other European
states in the project, but that this request had been
spurned.
No reconciliation
Last week, in Strasbourg, another attempt by German foreign
policy makers to launch a ,,European Centre of
Remembrance for Victims of Forcible Expulsions and Ethnic
Cleansing" was repulsed - it had been intended that
this would be done through the Council of Europe. At a
meeting of the Council, German politicians and academics had
tried to secure international legitimisation for their aim
of establishing the equivalence of resettlements and
genocide.2) The reasoning cited in the motion
draws on diffuse and generalising assertions, the tendency
of which is obvious. For example, it lumps together in one
category both the victims of Nazi aggression and those who
initiated it, on the basis of both having been
,,affected" by ,,mass movements".
This form of words leaves it unclear whether the term
,,mass movements" includes the post-war
resettlements in the former Warsaw Pact countries, thus
establishing claims in law for which the Czech Republic,
among others, might be liable. The motion gained a simple
majority but failed to achieve the two-thirds vote it
required. The French delegation justified its rejection by
saying that the project was likely to reinforce resettled
Germans' demands for compensation, and therefore did nothing
to foster reconciliation between states that had formerly
been enemies.3) The delegation's leader, Bernard
Schreiner, also stated that ,,Two different tragedies are
being discussed as if they were equal and comparable:
deportations to death camps and enforced mass
movements."4)
A national option
In the meantime, the Berlin-based ,,Zentrum gegen
Vertreibungen" (Centre against Expulsions), which
is regarded as an association of ,,expellees",
is preparing to mount an exhibition under the title ,,Das
Jahrhundert der Vertreibungen" (The century of
expulsions). In an interview with the German weekly
newspaper ,,Junge Freiheit", which is regarded
as extreme right-wing, the Centre's joint president, Peter
Glotz (a member of the Social Democrat Party) explained that
the exhibition ,,would begin by describing the fate of
the Armenians and end with the 'ethnic cleansings' in
Kosovo". It is to run in the autumn of next year in
Berlin. The foundation is keeping open the option to go it
alone on a national level in setting up a Centre against
Expulsions in the event of the ,,European" plans
coming to nothing.
1) see also Total revision and Potsdam and Versailles
2) Markus Meckel, Karl Schloegel, Stefan Troebst
3) Widerstand im Europarat; Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 26.01.2005
4) Proposal to create a remembrance centre for victims of forced population movements fails to win Assembly's support; assembly.coe.int 27.01.2005
1) see also Total revision and Potsdam and Versailles
2) Markus Meckel, Karl Schloegel, Stefan Troebst
3) Widerstand im Europarat; Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung 26.01.2005
4) Proposal to create a remembrance centre for victims of forced population movements fails to win Assembly's support; assembly.coe.int 27.01.2005
