From the DW:
“German Stasi murder trial 50
years after Berlin Wall shooting”
(Czeslaw Kukuczka)
Czeslaw Kukuczka was shot dead
from a short distance at the Friedrichstrasse station border crossing
For years, the former member of
communist East Germany's secret police had been in peaceful retirement in a
detached house on the outskirts of Leipzig, tending to his garden. Now, aged
80, the ex-lieutenant in the Stasi has gone on trial accused of shooting dead a
Polish man who tried to flee communism 50 years ago. Through his lawyer, he
denied the charges of murder in court on Thursday. His name has not been
officially confirmed. But according to prosecutors, while working for the
Stasi, he allegedly shot Czeslaw Kukuczka in the back from as he tried to cross
from East Berlin to the West.
Kukuczka was a Polish firefighter
and a father of three, who was desperate to start a new life in the West. In
1974 he left Poland, ostensibly to spend the weekend in East Berlin. In
reality, he had a plan to escape into West Berlin and then, it's thought, on to
the US where he had relatives. While in East Berlin, Kukuczka went to the
Polish embassy carrying a briefcase, which he claimed contained a bomb. He
threatened to blow up the embassy if he was not granted permission to leave
East Germany. Kukuczka was given the necessary documents and was accompanied by
Stasi officials to the checkpoint at the nearby Friedrichstrasse train station
to cross to the West. He thought his plan had worked, but it was a trick. As he
made his way through the checkpoints, Mr Kukuczka was shot in the back. He
later bled to death in a clinic at the Hohenschönhausen Stasi prison.
A group of West German
schoolgirls, who were returning from a school trip to East Berlin, say they saw
a man in a raincoat and sunglasses shoot him. That man, say prosecutors, was
the former Stasi officer on trial in Berlin on Thursday. East German and Polish
officials later attempted to cover up the case, not even telling Kukuczka's
family what happened. The family received an urn to bury, but never the full
story. During the 1990s, after German reunification, there were multiple
investigations, but never enough evidence to track down the killer.
In 2005, the case was closed. But
in 2016, Polish and German historians found new evidence in Stasi archives,
including records indicating that the accused appears to have received a bronze
medal for his role in the case. Prosecutors believe the new evidence proves
that the 80-year-old pensioner is the man who pulled the trigger. The archives
also show that Czeslaw Kukuczka's briefcase did not contain a bomb and disprove
later claims by East German officials that he was carrying a gun.
At least 140 people were killed
trying to leave communist East Germany while the Berlin Wall was up. It is rare
for those responsible to face justice. Until now, those who have been
prosecuted were generally accused of manslaughter, not murder.
^ Sadly, the Germans have a poor
record of bringing to justice those people that do horrific crimes whether as a
Nazi or a Communist. ^
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