Germany has officially recognised as genocide its colonial-era slaughter of tens of thousands of Namibians more than a century ago and committed €1.1bn to the southern African nation in recompense, a move that could set a precedent for other countries.
The announcement comes after six years of talks with Namibia, which came close to foundering last month over whether the funds should be labelled reparations, a term Germany feared could open it up to other legal claims.
German soldiers killed more than 60,000 indigenous Herero and Nama tribespeople between 1904 and 1908 amid an uprising against German colonial rule. It has long been considered by historians and the UN to be the first genocide of the 20th century.
On Friday Germany’s foreign minister, Heiko Maas, said Germany officially acknowledged that the events “from today’s perspective” were “a genocide.”
“In light of Germany’s historical and moral responsibility, we will ask Namibia and the descendants of the victims for forgiveness.”
But Friday’s deal between Berlin and the Namibian government was rejected by the traditional leaders of the Herero and Nama who said it was too little to compensate for the suffering of their ancestors, including the taking of the majority of their land.
They said they had largely been excluded from the talks, although Germany argues some members of the community were consulted.
Germany’s offer is a “total insult to our intelligence” and Namibian lawmakers should reject it, Vekuii Rukoro, the head of the Ovaherero Traditional Authority, said this week. “That is not enough for the blood of our ancestors. We will fight to hell and back.”
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, German president, is expected to visit Namibia to atone, but Rukoro said parliament should walk out and reject the “so-called apology.”
Germany had earlier acknowledged “moral responsibility” but had long avoided an official apology to evade compensation claims. On Friday, Maas stressed “legal claims to compensation cannot be derived from this.”.
Berlin says the Genocide Convention of 1948 cannot be applied retroactively and is wary of opening itself up to other reparations claims. Greece still argues, for example, that Berlin should repay some €289bn over damages caused by Nazi Germany.
For this reason, the €1.1bn fund is being offered to Namibia for reconstruction and development projects over 30 years, and is not defined as reparation.
“It is reconstruction and reconciliation we are seeking,” Zed Ngavirue, a veteran Namibian diplomat who led the country’s negotiators, has said of the talks.
Henning Melber, a Namibian scholar and extraordinary professor at the University of Pretoria, said reconciliation between people “required more than a bilaterally negotiated deal between governments, who both do not include a meaningful degree of civil society”.
“Whatever the next steps will be, there remains a long way to true reconciliation,” he added.
Unlike its recognition of Nazi crimes, including the Holocaust, Germany had long ignored its colonial legacy, although it was the third largest colonial power in 19th-century Africa. It lost control of its colonial territories after the first world war.
Descendants of German settlers still own large tracts of land in Namibia, a divisive issue in one of the world’s most unequal nations, which after German colonial rule became a South African possession until 1990.
Geingob’s government has pledged to accelerate reforms to place more land in the hands of the majority but has avoided following South Africa’s moves toward allowing expropriation of land without compensation.
The Namibia deal comes a day after French president Emmanuel Macron’s recognition of France’s role in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda, as European countries begin to more openly examine their colonial legacy.
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2021-05-28 09:52:24Z
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