Vous êtes ici : Accueil » Afrique australe » Namibie » The Fallible Pope

The Fallible Pope

D 8 mai 2015     H 05:00     A     C 0 messages


Pope Francis described the Armenian massacre by the Turks as "the first genocide of the 20th century." This was simply factually incorrect. That grim distinction belongs to the genocide that imperial Germany unleashed a decade earlier against the Herero and Nama, two ethnic groups who lived in the former colony of South West Africa, modern Namibia.

The Namibian genocide, prefigured the later horrors. The systematic extermination of around 80 percent of the Herero people and 50 percent of the Nama was the work both of German soldiers and colonial administrators ; "banal, desk-bound killers." As they have been portrayed. The most reliable figures estimate 90,000 people were killed.

In the case of the Herero, an official, written order - the extermination order - was issued by the German commander, explicitly condemning the entire people to annihilation. After military attempts to bring this about had been thwarted, the liquidation of the surviving Herero, along with the Nama people, was continued in concentration camps, a term that was used at the time for the archipelago of facilities the Germans built across Namibia. Some of the victims of the Namibian genocide were transported to those camps in cattle trucks and the bodies of some of the victims were subjected to pseudoscientific racial examinations and dissections.

All of this is now well known, fully documented and widely accepted and the Pope should have acknowledged this. Germany’s “forgotten genocide”, it seems, still remains forgotten in the Vatican. Crimes such as the Namibian genocide can no longer be ignored, whether by accident or design.

Source from http://socialistbanner.blogspot.com/

Rechercher

Les plus lus

1.  ALIMENTATION : Réduire la faim, soutenir les femmes agricultrices

2.  Déclaration à propos de la menace du gouvernement britannique de priver d’aide les pays qui violent les droits des personnes LGBTI en Afrique

3.  Angola : Isabel dos Santos, Honour and Lies

4.  La voix des Sahraouis étouffée au cœur de l’Europe

5.  Botswana : LABOUR TRANSFORMATION, THE DYNAMICS AND CHALLENGES IN A DEMOCRATIC SOCIETY


5 articles au hasard

1.  Djibouti : Deux blessés très graves à Yoboki et des dizaines d’autres après une intervention musclée des forces militaires locales

2.  Mali : de jeunes Dogons et Peuls unis contre les violences

3.  Burkina Faso : L’échec de l’intervention de l’armée française au Sahel et l’héritage de Compaoré

4.  togo : CAP 2015 et les forces démocratiques invitent le Chef de l’Etat à prendre en compte la situation sociopolitique du pays

5.  Djibouti : « L’échec ou la réussite d’un pays est indexé à la performance de son système éducatif »


Les plus populaires

1.  La liberté de la presse en berne au Burkina Faso : suspension de 9 sites en 48h portant à 13 le nombre de médias n’ayant plus droit de cité dans le pays

2.  Crowded camps and local aid : How DR Congo’s M23 conflict is impacting Goma

3.  NUMSA’s Political Perspectives on the Crisis of Leadership in the ANC and SA

4.  Cameroon : a Marxist approach to the national crisis

5.  Guinée : Sur la dissolution du FNDC