E/CN.4/1996/72
page 27
According to the police reports which I have at my disposal, the
police officers were wearing helmets, bullet-proof vests and face masks,
as well as armbands with the word ’Police’ printed on them, and had Land
crests on their vests. When the officers entered the ’Bistro Royal’,
those present, including Mr. Bayrak, Mr. Yildiz and Mr. Isik were
addressed several times, loudly and clearly, with the words: ’Police,
don’t move’.
Mr. Bayrak reportedly rushed towards one of the police officers
with outstretched arms, although the former was carrying a firearm in his
right hand. He was then pushed to the ground and handcuffed by two other
officers. The officers had to use considerable force because of the
amount of resistance offered by Mr. Bayrak. The claim made by Mr. Bayrak
in the investigation proceedings that a sack had been pulled over his
head is incorrect. The SEK did not use any such item. Because another
of those present said that Mr. Bayrak suffered from heart disease, he was
immediately treated by the emergency doctor who was on the scene.
According to the report, Mr. Bayrak was neither struck nor kicked.
The police report further states that Mr. Yildiz attempted to grab
a machine gun from an officer who was providing cover. The officer
defended himself against this attack. The report states that Mr. Yildiz
was handcuffed. In proceeding 40 UJs 22/95, Mr. Yildiz stated that he
had interpreted the incident not as a police operation but as an attack
by an gang of criminals or a terrorist group, and had thus attempted ’in
an instinctive defensive reaction’ to push the weapon which was in the
hand of the nearest police officer to the side.
According to the information available to me to date, there is no
reason whatever to suppose that the police operation in question was
’racially motivated’."
45.
Düsseldorf chief public prosecution office also reported that the three
persons apprehended in the pool café "Bistro Royal" in Mülheim an der Ruhr
were two Yugoslavs and one German national.
Case No. 1995/9
Allegations
Place:
Cologne (North-Rhine/Westphalia)
Date:
13 April 1994
46.
It has been reported that on 8 April 1994 a newborn baby was found
abandoned in a park in Cologne and taken to hospital where he was examined and
declared to be in sound health.
47.
On 13 April 1994, at 6 a.m., more than 100 policemen are said to have
been dispatched to surround a camp for asylum-seekers belonging to the Roma
and Sinti minorities. There they are said to have conducted a search because,
they said, they were tipped off by a witness who saw a woman with a baby
carriage who looked "like a Gypsy".