News Archive | Printer Version | September 22, 2007 | |
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Ernst Zündel
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German journalists, parliamentarians under investigation for leaking classified documents (My comment: The Associated Press, August 3, 2007 BERLIN: Seventeen German journalists and several members of parliament are under investigation in the alleged leak of classified documents given to a parliamentary committee, the federal prosecutor's office said Friday. The documents related to a parliamentary inquiry into possible German government complicity in CIA prisoner flights and the detention of two men. The president of the German parliament, Norbert Lammert, had sought charges against the journalists in June, senior prosecutor Simone Herbeth said, adding that an unidentified number of members were also under investigation. "There is also an investigation in the direction of those entrusted with official secrets," Herberth said. "MPs are also being looked at." The president of the Federal Association of German Newspaper Publishers criticized the investigations."It is not acceptable that journalists who are reporting about possible misdoing or errors have to fear persecution for giving away official secrets," Helmut Heinen said. The journalists, among them reporters for national publications Sueddeutsche Zeitung, Spiegel, Die Zeit and Die Welt, are under investigation on suspicion of having published classified material that is subject of a parliamentary committee. The editor-in-chief of weekly Spiegel, who is under investigation together with four of the news magazine's reporters, called the inquiry an attack on press freedom. "This seems to be an indiscriminate attack on press freedom," Stefan Aust was quoted as saying in the magazine's online edition. The parliamentary committee is investigating the German government's possible complicity in the cases of CIA rendition flights that had layovers in Germany as well as the German secret service's activities in Baghdad during the U.S. invasion in 2003 The committee is also looking into the disputed kidnapping of Khalid el-Masri and the years-long detention of Murat Kurnaz. El-Masri, a German citizen of Lebanese descent, says that he was seized in Macedonia on Dec. 31, 2003, and taken by CIA agents to Afghanistan, where he was allegedly abused before being released in Albania in May 2004. Kurnaz, who was born in Bremen, Germany, but has Turkish citizenship, was detained in Pakistan in 2001, turned over to U.S. authorities and held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay as a terror suspect until his release in 2006. Opposition politicians had asked for the parliamentary committee to probe whether the German government looked the other way over practices such as the reported abduction. Some have accused German officials of delaying Kurnaz' release from Guantanamo. In February, Germany's highest court ruled that authorities had violated press freedom in ordering a raid on the offices of a magazine that cited classified information in an article about the late leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi. The offices of the monthly Cicero were searched on Sept. 12, 2005 as investigators attempted to pinpoint the source of a leak of confidential papers from Germany's Federal Crime Office on the financing of Islamic extremists.
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