Germany offers money to families of Olympic attack victims
BERLIN -- The German government indicated Wednesday
that it was willing to pay further compensation to the families of 11 Israeli
athletes killed at the 1972 Summer Olympics in Munich by a Palestinian group.
Family members of the athletes have criticized the proposed amount as
“insulting.”
Relatives of the athletes have long criticized how German
authorities handled the attack and its aftermath. Demands for further
compensation have threatened to overshadow a planned memorial event for the
50th anniversary of the massacre.
Germany's Interior Ministry said it was holding talks with
the relatives and that the “serious consequences for the surviving dependents
of the victims in immaterial and material terms” should be reassessed.
“An offer of further recognition payments to the surviving
relatives of the victims of the attack” was planned, the ministry told German
news agency dpa adding that “the memorial ceremony of the 50th anniversary
should be the occasion for a clear political classification of the events of
1972.”
Members of the Palestinian group Black September broke into
the Olympic Village and took athletes from Israel's national team hostage on
Sept. 5, 1972, with the goal of forcing the release of prisoners held by Israel
and two left-wing extremists in West German jails.
Eleven Israelis and a West German police officer died during
the attack, including during a botched rescue attempt.
Immediately after the attack, Germany made payments to the
relatives of the victims amounting to about 4.19 million marks (about 2 million
euros or $2.09 million), according to the Interior Ministry. In 2002, the
surviving relatives received another 3 million euros, dpa reported.
A claim for compensation payments amounting to around 40
million marks cited massive errors in the police operation, but it was
dismissed because of the statute of limitations.
In Israel, Ilana Romano, the widow of Yossef Romano, a
weightlifter who was one of the first Israelis killed, told public broadcaster
Kan on Tuesday that Germany's current reparations offer was “degrading” and the
victims' survivors rejected it.
“The offer is degrading, and we are standing by our stance
that we are boycotting the (anniversary) ceremony,” she said, adding that
Germany “threw us to the dogs. They mistreated us for 50 years.”
“They decided to take responsibility — very nice after 50
years,” Romano said, calling for proper compensation for the families “not
pennies.”
Ankie Spitzer, the widow of Andre Spitzer, a fencing coach
with the Israeli Olympic team who was killed in the attack, also rejected the
sum offered by Germany.
"The sum we have been offered is insulting,” Spitzer
told RedaktionsNetzwerk Deutschland newspaper group on Wednesday. “We are angry
and disappointed.”
The newspaper group — citing families of the victims —
reported that Germany had offered 10 million euros to the families, which would
include the payments that were already made in the past.
The German government has not publicly revealed how much
money it has offered.
“We never wanted to talk about money publicly,” Spitzer
said, “but now we are forced to do so.”
If the current offer stands, the relatives will not come to
Munich for the commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the attack in early
September, Spitzer said.
Demands to release previously unpublished files on the
attack were met last month, when officials in Bavaria said they would release
any files under wraps in the southern German state.
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