Germany Apologizes for Colonial-Era Genocide in Namibia
Germany apologized on Friday for its role in the slaughter of Herero and Nama tribespeople in Namibia more than a century ago and officially described the massacre as genocide for the first time, as it agreed to fund projects worth over a billion euros.
But Herero paramount chief Vekuii Rukoro
rejected as insulting a deal agreed by the German and Namibian governments
because it did not include payment of reparations.
"That's a
black cat in the bag instead of reparations for a crime against humanity,"
Rukoro told Reuters, referring to a German commitment to fund 1.1 billion euros
($1.3 billion) of reconstruction and development projects in Namibia.
"No
self-respecting African will accept such an insult in this day and age from a
so-called civilized European nation." German soldiers killed some 65,000
Herero and 10,000 Nama people in a 1904-1908 campaign after a revolt against
land seizures by colonists in what historians and the United Nations have long
called the first genocide of the 20th century.
While Germany has previously acknowledged
"moral responsibility" for the killings, it had avoided making an
official apology for the massacres to avoid compensation claims.
In a statement announcing an agreement with
Namibia following more than five years of negotiations, Foreign Minister Heiko
Maas said the events of the German colonial period should be named
"without sparing or glossing over them". "We will now also
officially call these events what they were from today's perspective: a
genocide," Maas said.
"In light
of Germany's historical and moral responsibility, we will ask Namibia and the
descendants of the victims for forgiveness."
The German funding will directly benefit the
genocide-affected communities, he said.
Namibian media reported on Thursday that the
money would support infrastructure, healthcare and training programs over 30
years. Anne Marcus, a 34-year-old German living in Namibia, said she was
suspicious of the announcement because it came at a time when Namibia was
financially vulnerable.
"I think it
was a very opportune time for the Germans to act and agree on something,
knowing that there was a likelihood for Namibia to accept whatever offer came
their way. So I'm not entirely sure justice has been served," she said. T
he southwest African country saw its economy
contract by a record 8% in 2020 as it was hit by the coronavirus pandemic.
Last month, it received its first-ever funds
from the International Monetary Fund to address the country's deteriorating
fiscal position.
Germany, which lost all its colonial territories
after World War One, was the third biggest colonial power after Britain and
France. However, its colonial past was ignored for decades while historians and
politicians focused more on the legacy of Nazi crimes, including the Holocaust.
In 2015, it began formal negotiations with
Namibia over the issue and in 2018 returned skulls and other remains of
massacred tribespeople that were used in colonial-era experiments to assert
claims of European racial superiority.