Dubai Telegraph - Ex-Stasi officer jailed over 1974 Berlin border killing

EUR -
AED 3.996432
AFN 72.565475
ALL 98.524386
AMD 421.199603
ANG 1.963966
AOA 991.760921
ARS 1065.752259
AUD 1.626134
AWG 1.960688
AZN 1.850851
BAM 1.954897
BBD 2.200353
BDT 130.229835
BGN 1.955574
BHD 0.410152
BIF 3216.467132
BMD 1.088062
BND 1.426434
BOB 7.557404
BRL 6.151251
BSD 1.089782
BTN 91.577929
BWP 14.540082
BYN 3.566303
BYR 21326.021555
BZD 2.196655
CAD 1.499453
CDF 3090.097311
CHF 0.938818
CLF 0.037066
CLP 1022.767462
CNY 7.745699
CNH 7.758554
COP 4617.736504
CRC 560.633263
CUC 1.088062
CUP 28.833652
CVE 110.212563
CZK 25.229986
DJF 194.057672
DKK 7.460903
DOP 65.61878
DZD 144.953987
EGP 52.838046
ERN 16.320935
ETB 130.240171
FJD 2.426651
FKP 0.832552
GBP 0.83598
GEL 2.964945
GGP 0.832552
GHS 17.370735
GIP 0.832552
GMD 74.519607
GNF 9400.527439
GTQ 8.426991
GYD 227.991527
HKD 8.453429
HNL 27.311327
HRK 7.495694
HTG 143.612992
HUF 400.20897
IDR 16925.407887
ILS 4.093753
IMP 0.832552
INR 91.465818
IQD 1427.640442
IRR 45796.543497
ISK 149.292648
JEP 0.832552
JMD 172.737815
JOD 0.771328
JPY 162.518473
KES 140.587928
KGS 93.025998
KHR 4427.933983
KMF 491.858448
KPW 979.255846
KRW 1482.626623
KWD 0.333807
KYD 0.90818
KZT 531.634389
LAK 23878.639076
LBP 97587.669963
LKR 319.527976
LRD 209.780191
LSL 19.141693
LTL 3.212765
LVL 0.658158
LYD 5.225514
MAD 10.722898
MDL 19.250841
MGA 4988.765635
MKD 61.607771
MMK 3533.983986
MNT 3697.235808
MOP 8.718972
MRU 43.165463
MUR 50.431548
MVR 16.712703
MWK 1889.301113
MXN 21.413763
MYR 4.675952
MZN 69.537923
NAD 19.141957
NGN 1780.37415
NIO 40.073378
NOK 11.77877
NPR 146.524287
NZD 1.7949
OMR 0.418871
PAB 1.089797
PEN 4.103627
PGK 4.280709
PHP 62.94495
PKR 302.154355
PLN 4.294093
PYG 8535.938791
QAR 3.961363
RON 4.975923
RSD 117.00927
RUB 105.547406
RWF 1474.324449
SAR 4.084917
SBD 9.067816
SCR 15.391703
SDG 654.468242
SEK 11.33984
SGD 1.424105
SHP 0.832552
SLE 24.581269
SLL 22816.119427
SOS 622.803684
SRD 35.196614
STD 22520.693322
SVC 9.535595
SYP 2733.789523
SZL 19.214858
THB 36.234103
TJS 11.584248
TMT 3.808218
TND 3.349906
TOP 2.548353
TRY 37.23937
TTD 7.398514
TWD 35.018738
TZS 2965.331025
UAH 44.897239
UGX 3999.097319
USD 1.088062
UYU 45.288453
UZS 13932.638039
VEF 3941562.930189
VES 42.292312
VND 27168.916236
VUV 129.176978
WST 3.047863
XAF 655.645059
XAG 0.034455
XAU 0.000407
XCD 2.940543
XDR 0.814313
XOF 654.468605
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.445987
ZAR 19.168339
ZMK 9793.86498
ZMW 28.797299
ZWL 350.355624
  • CMSC

    0.1700

    24.86

    +0.68%

  • RIO

    -1.2300

    66.47

    -1.85%

  • RBGPF

    60.7100

    60.71

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    12.95

    -0.23%

  • GSK

    -0.1700

    38.96

    -0.44%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    67.16

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    35.41

    -0.11%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    142.23

    -0.53%

  • RELX

    0.8400

    48.22

    +1.74%

  • CMSD

    0.0820

    25.062

    +0.33%

  • JRI

    -0.0565

    13.03

    -0.43%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.05

    +0.28%

  • BCE

    0.8500

    33.41

    +2.54%

  • AZN

    -0.2500

    77.85

    -0.32%

  • BP

    -1.2500

    30.74

    -4.07%

  • VOD

    -0.0400

    9.64

    -0.41%

Ex-Stasi officer jailed over 1974 Berlin border killing
Ex-Stasi officer jailed over 1974 Berlin border killing / Photo: Jean-Philippe LACOUR - AFP/File

Ex-Stasi officer jailed over 1974 Berlin border killing

A former East German secret police officer was sentenced to 10 years in jail for shooting dead a Polish man trying to flee to the West 50 years ago, in a landmark ruling Monday.

Text size:

The decision, almost 35 years after the Berlin Wall fell, marks the first murder conviction for a former Stasi officer for a homicide committed on duty, according to historians.

The Berlin court found ex-Stasi officer Martin Naumann, 80, guilty of murder for killing Czeslaw Kukuczka at close range as he sought to flee through Berlin's Friedrichstrasse border point in 1974.

Judge Bernd Miczajka said the court had no doubt that Naumann was the gunman in the killing that was "carried out mercilessly" at the orders of the Stasi, adding that those who gave the order could no longer be brought to justice.

Speaking ahead of the verdict, Daniela Muenkel, the head of the Stasi archives in Berlin, had said a conviction would have "great symbolic significance" in Germany's efforts to atone for the injustices of the communist dictatorship.

Three West German schoolgirls returning from a class trip witnessed the killing at the crossing, dubbed the "Palace of Tears" for its frequent sad farewells.

Now adults, they were called to testify during Naumann's trial in Berlin.

Prosecutors had called for Naumann to be jailed for 12 years, branding the shooting "an insidious case of murder".

Naumann denied the charges through his defence lawyers but declined to address the court.

The defence had argued there was no proof Naumann was the shooter -- or that the killing constituted murder rather than manslaughter, on which the statute of limitations would have expired.

In all, at least 140 people were killed trying to cross the Berlin Wall between 1961 and 1989, and hundreds more died while trying to flee East Germany by other means.

- Bomb threat -

On the day he died, Kukuczka had gone to the Polish embassy in East Berlin and threatened to detonate a dummy bomb unless he was granted passage to the West, according to recent historical research.

Embassy staff are believed to have approved Kukuczka's request while alerting East German authorities to the threat.

Stasi officials handed Kukuczka an exit visa and led him to the crossing where Naumann was waiting, concealed behind a screen, according to prosecutors.

Archival documents suggest the secret police were under orders to "render harmless" the Pole, a common euphemism found in Stasi documents for the liquidation of political opponents.

Initial investigations into Kukuczka's death in the 1990s led nowhere, but the case was picked up again after Poland issued a European arrest warrant for Naumann in 2021.

He was then charged with murder in October last year.

The decades-long delay illustrates the challenges Germany has faced in delivering justice to victims of the former communist government, with many cases hampered by a lack of evidence.

During the 1990s, a total of 251 people were charged with crimes committed on behalf of the Stasi, according to official government records.

However, two-thirds of the criminal proceedings ended either with an acquittal or without a verdict and only 87 defendants were convicted, with most receiving mild sentences.

A.El-Nayady--DT