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Namibian memorial reignites call for German reparations

Oct 06, 2011

from the article on AFP:

A national memorial Wednesday for 20 Namibian skulls seized by Imperial Germany a century ago provoked emotional calls for reparations for colonial-era abuses.

German forces took the skulls from the tens of thousands left dead during an anti-colonial uprising by the once-mighty Herero and Nama people from 1904-1908.

....Namibian President Hifikepunye Pohamba decried the colonial-era abuses, but did not mention reparations when he addressed the 1,000 mourners.

"German imperial troops committed horrendous atrocities" against Namibians, he said.

"Through their unselfish sacrifices, our ancestors laid a strong foundation for the modern liberation struggle" leading to independence from South Africa in 1990.

"Their spirits were never broken and while their mortal remains were removed from Namibia amidst the ruins of war, they returned now to an independent, peaceful and stable Namibia."

German ambassador Egon Kochanke said the return of the skulls "reminds us of a dark chapter in history, which still causes tremendous grief. Allow me to mourn with you and to bow my head in deep regret."

Germany has ruled out reparation and always maintained that its 600 million euros in development aid since Namibia's independence was "for the benefit of all Namibians."

Read the whole article.

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