A/49/677
English
Page 15
64. In 1993, 783 acts of violence in which xenophobia was the confirmed or
probable motive were recorded. Despite the considerable drop in the number of
offences after September 1992, there was an increase of nearly 200 acts of
violence over the same period for the previous year. 28/
65. On 9 October 1994, in the city of Magdeburg, five skinheads attacked four
African asylum-seekers. During the assault one African sustained knife wounds
after being attacked with a broken beer bottle. The attackers got away. In
Berlin, extreme-right youngsters beat up a passenger and then tried to push him
out of the subway. The injured victim was taken to the hospital. That same
day, skinheads attacked another three persons. 29/
66. The Special Rapporteur would like to cite the Committee on the Elimination
of Racial Discrimination, reporting on the situation in Germany at its
forty-third session:
"The Committee expressed serious concern at the manifestations of
xenophobia, anti-Semitism, racial discrimination and racial violence that
had recently occurred in Germany. In spite of the Government’s efforts to
counteract and to prevent them, it appeared that those manifestations were
increasing and that the German police system had in many instances failed
to provide effective protection to victims and potential victims of
xenophobia and racial discrimination, as required by the Convention. The
Committee particularly held that all those who carried out functions in
public and political life should in no way encourage sentiments of racism
and xenophobia." 30/
67. With regard to the behaviour of police towards foreigners, on
13 September 1994 in Hamburg, 27 police officers were suspended from duty as a
result of complaints that they had maltreated foreigners. Some of those
officers were even under the suspicion of having close links with extreme right
organizations. The Interior Minister of Hamburg, W. Hackmann, resigned,
claiming that it was in protest against the behaviour of some police officers
towards foreigners. The whole scandal followed an article which had been
published in the local newspapers, according to which, on 15 January 1994, a
44-year-old Senegalese had been beaten up by two police officers for wearing a
cap with an anti-Nazi slogan. The two police officers were never put on trial,
and they were merely ordered by the public prosecutor to pay a fine of
5,400 deutsche mark (DM). The Minister of Justice of Hamburg has initiated an
inquiry to examine 120 declarations of police misconduct.
68. That event in Hamburg was not isolated. In Berlin the public prosecutor
sentenced three police officers to pay fines from DM 10,000 up to DM 14,000.
They had dragged an Iranian from a bus on Christmas Eve in 1992 and maltreated
him. And in Bernau, a small city near Berlin, a chief of police is under the
suspicion of having systematically maltreated Vietnamese. According to Amnesty
International, there is a huge increase in the number of cases of maltreatment
of foreigners by the German police. 31/
69. In Belgium, on 15 October 1994, a report by the Committee for the
Prevention of Torture and Inhuman Treatment of the Council of Europe asserts
that the Belgian police are guilty of violent action against detainees and
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