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| bombardement Dresden oorlogsmisdaad | linking - 13.02.2005 00:43
Hmm mja... Uiteraard is het zaak om neonazi's met hun revisionistische praatjes tegen te gaan, en een zoektochtje levert ook en niet onverwacht heel wat van dergelijke sites op. Evengoed kan het bombardement op Dresden niet anders worden betiteld dan als een oorlogsmisdaad, waarvoor noch in Neurenberg noch later iemand veroordeeld is. Zie bijv. ook http://www.socialistworker.org/2005-1/530/530_08_Dresden.shtml Allies destroyed Dresden, but never bombed Auschwitz American war crime in the “good war” February 11, 2005 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Dresden_in_World_War_II Bombing of Dresden in World War II From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. http://www.chomsky.info/talks/1990----.htm If the Nuremberg Laws were Applied... Noam Chomsky Delivered around 1990 | Tralala anti-deutsche | xx - 13.02.2005 00:49
Quote: "Zo’n 500 tot 700 ‘autonomen’ demonstreerden reeds op zaterdag 12 februari in Dresden. Wellicht dat hun bikkelharde opstelling een reden vormt voor de tegenvallende opkomst. Hun leus ‘Geen tranen voor Dresden’ toont weinig medeleven." Tja, en dan kijk je maar eens naar zo'n filmpje van die tegendemo, helaas zonder geluid maar de beelden waren meer dan duidelijk: vlaggen van alle geallieerde staten plus Israel... Dat de anti-deutsche toch nog zo'n 500 lui op de been zouden krijgen? Het betreft hier een geval van typisch Duitse folklore uit radikale hoek. Niet veel idioter dan de gemiddelde anti-imps die solidair zijn met ik weet niet welke staat in oprichting, feitelijk een soort logisch spiegelbeeld. Een beetje zoals John Veldhuis dus, maar dan omgekeerd. Binnenkort herdenken diezelfde lui waarschijnlijk de gesneuvelde Britse en Amerikaanse piloten van de Luchtbrug op Berlijn. | NEO-NAZI MARCH AS DRESDEN REMEMBERS | AFA - 13.02.2005 18:39
NEO-NAZI MARCH AS DRESDEN REMEMBERS(Germany) 13/2/2005- Waving black flags and carrying banners, thousands of neo-Nazis have marched in Dresden, overshadowing the official 60th anniversary commemoration of one of the fiercest Allied bombing raids of World War Two. Before Sunday's march Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder pledged to stop far-right groups exploiting the anniversary and portraying Germany as a war victim while ignoring Nazi atrocities. Police said at least 2,000 people joined the march. Politicians voiced concern the march might turn into Germany's biggest far-right demonstration since the war -- that neo-Nazis might clash with residents planning to turn out in their thousands wearing white roses in a counter-protest. British, American, French and Russian dignitaries were due to attend events meant to send a message of peace and reconciliation, whilst remembering the crimes of the Nazis and those cities which shared Dresden's fate. Official ceremonies began with a wreath-laying ceremony at a mass grave while neo-Nazi marchers elsewhere in the city carried balloons saying: "Allied bomb terror -- then as now. Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Dresden and today Baghdad. No forgiveness, no forgetting." One banner read: "The bombing holocaust will not be suppressed." Dresden, untouched by bombing just months before the end of World War Two, was 85 percent destroyed by two waves of British bombers on the night of Feb. 13, 1945. U.S. planes blasted the city the next day. The official death toll is put at around 35,000 but many survivors believe the actual number was higher as bodies were reduced to ashes in the ensuing firestorm. City ruined "Thousands of innocent people, including many children and refugees, died in most terrible circumstances," Schroeder said in a statement on Sunday. "One of the most beautiful cities in Europe was destroyed. We mourn today for the victims of war and violent Nazi rule in Dresden, Germany and Europe." Once dubbed the Florence of northern Europe for architectural jewels such as the Zwinger palace and the Semper Opera, the city was reduced to smoldering ruins. East German socialist town planners restored some historic buildings but also tore vast concrete avenues through the city's heart. Today ugly concrete housing blocks jostle with church spires on the city skyline. Dresdeners take huge pride in the baroque Frauenkirche, rebuilt in the 15 years since German reunification in 1990, and which was topped last year with a golden cross from Britain. The anniversary has reopened a debate over how to mourn Germany's war dead while containing the resurgent far right. Schroeder pledged to counter all attempts to distort history and hinted he would make a fresh attempt to ban the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) which helped organize the march. "We will use all means to counter these attempts to re-interpret history. We will not allow cause to be confused with effect," he said. "This is our obligation to all the victims of the war and Nazi terror, especially and also the victims of Dresden." Members of the NPD that sits in the Dresden-based Saxony state parliament provoked outrage last month by walking out of a commemoration of the liberation of Auschwitz concentration camp and calling the air raids a "bombing holocaust." Britain's ambassador to Germany, Sir Peter Torry, told Sunday's Tagesspiegel newspaper likening the bombing of Dresden to the Holocaust was "highly problematic" but played down the threat posed by the NPD. The Nazis killed six million Jews in the Holocaust during World War Two. "I would take the phenomenon seriously but not overrate it. The neo-Nazis got into Saxony's parliament but on a low turnout," he was quoted as saying. ©Cable News Network http://www.cnn.com/
E-Mail: info@afanederland.org Website: http://www.afanederland.org | Neo- Nazis march in Dresden 13.02.2005 15:00 | AFA - 13.02.2005 18:40
Neo- Nazis march in Dresden 13.02.2005 15:00 Day-long commemorations are underway in Dresden of the Allied fire-bombing that destroyed the east German city in 1945. German officials have placed wreaths, accompanied by the American, British and French ambassadors. However the ceremonies were overshadowed by a march of neo-Nazis, organised by the NPD party, which has seats in the regional Saxony parliament. Police said at least 3,000 people joined the march in the eastern German city, making it one of the biggest far-right demonstrations since the war. Before the march, police said 5,000 attended a neo-Nazi rally. http://www.dw-world.de/dw/news/0,,12215_2,00.html?maca=en-news-19-rdf
| geen tegen demonstratie ??????????? | Willem - 13.02.2005 20:29
en geen tegen demonstratie????????????????? | niet gewerkt | Willem - 14.02.2005 11:02
heeft anders zo te zien niks geholpen | |
aanvullingen | |