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Monument to gay victims of Nazis vandalised in Berlin

An unidentified vandal defaced a memorial to the LGBT victims of the Nazis in central Berlin with homophobic flyers and attempted to set fire to it, police said Tuesday.

The memorial to the LGBT victims of the Nazis
The memorial to the LGBT victims of the Nazis in Tiergarten, Berlin. Photo: picture alliance / Ralf Hirschberger/dpa | Ralf Hirschberger

The man, who was spotted by a security guard but remains at large, threw a burning object at the memorial in the early hours of Saturday but it did not catch fire, a police spokesman told AFP.

He also affixed papers with a biblical quotation about homosexuality and the death penalty to the concrete slab monument, which features a video loop of two men kissing.

The security guard alerted police but the suspect was able to flee. A criminal probe has been opened.

The LSVD gay rights organisation said in a statement it was “shocked by the incitement of hate” behind the incident, and by another act of vandalism against a separate Holocaust memorial the same night.

It noted that the Old Testament verse on the signs “is frequently abused for queer-hostile agitation”.

The monument to gay victims was inaugurated in 2008 for the thousands of LGBT people persecuted, tortured and murdered by the Nazi regime between 1933 and 1945.

The memorial, which was commissioned by parliament, is in Tiergarten park in the heart of the capital, close to the main monument to the six million Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

READ ALSO: German parliament spotlights Nazis’ LGBTQ victims for first time

It is estimated that Nazi Germany sent 5,000 to 15,000 LGBT people to concentration camps together with Jews, political opponents, Roma, Jehovah’s Witnesses and others considered undesirable.

Once there, few were killed right away. Most were forced to wear a pink triangle, putting them at the bottom of the camp hierarchy, and many died of hunger, disease, abuse or exhaustion. Very few survived.

Police said Saturday that a man overnight set fire to a box of books on Nazism that was part of a Berlin monument dedicated to Jews deported to the camps by the Nazis.

The box of books was part of a memorial known as “Platform 17” at Grunewald railway station.

It was from Platform 17 that 50,000 German Jews were deported to Nazi concentration and death camps at Riga, Warsaw, Auschwitz and Theresienstadt beginning in 1941.

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LGBT

How Germany’s ‘self-determination law’ will make it easier for people to change their gender 

To change their gender in Germany's registry offices, people navigate high hurdles. The government has changed this with a new law on self-determination, which the Bundestag passed on Friday. 

How Germany's 'self-determination law' will make it easier for people to change their gender 

On Friday the Bundestag passed new rules for gender changes at the registry office.

The self-determination act makes it easier for someone in Germany to change their gender entry and first name officially. To do so, they can now simply submit a declaration to the registry office. There is no longer a requirement for a medical certificate, expert opinion or court order.

The self-determination act only affects the process for changing genders with the registry. It does not make any provisions for physical interventions, such as hormone therapies or gender reassignment surgery.

Who does the Self-Determination Act affect and when does it apply?

According to the Family Affairs Ministry the act was drafted with three groups of people in mind: transgender, intersex and non-binary people. 

Transgender people – also known as trans people – often do not identify with the gender they were assigned at birth, and may live with the feeling of being in the “wrong body”. Intersex people, on the other hand, have physical characteristics that cannot be clearly classified as male or female, which can also affect the set of chromosomes or hormone production. Non-binary people are defined by not feeling like they belong to any gender.

According to Germany’s Office of Justice, 3,232 people proceeded with gender entry changes in 2021. The press office for  Sven Lehmann,, the government’s representative for the rights of the LGBTQ community, said they expect about 4,000 declarations per year going forward.

The new procedure will apply from November 1st 2024 under current government plans. 

READ ALSO: Germany set to simplify gender change procedure 

What’s wrong with the current law?

Until now, official gender identity changes were governed by the Transsexual Act of 1980, which will become obsolete with the new law. 

Under the previous law, people who wanted to change their legally registered genders had to endure a lengthy and costly procedure, which included getting an expert opinion and court order, if they wanted to have their gender entry and first name changed. 

Until 2011, transgender people even had to be sterilised for this purpose. 

The Federal Government’s Queer Commissioner, Sven Lehmann, says the current legal situation violates human dignity. The German Psychotherapists’ Association has also been advocating removing these hurdles for some time.

What are the age limits for changing the gender entry?

Minors under the age of 14 are not allowed to submit the declaration to the registry office themselves. Instead, it needs to be submitted by a legal representative in this case. 

Minors who are 14 or older, can submit the declaration to the registry office themself, but also need the consent of their legal representative. 

When one’s legal representative disagrees, the case could be challenged in the family court. If both parents have custody and cannot come to an agreement, they are required to make a decision in the best interests of the child. Otherwise, the family court can decide a solution.

Adults can submit the declaration themselves, without the need for further consent or consultation. However, a change is only possible once a year at most.

Names are generally changed along with gender

A person’s first name is expected to be changed along with their gender identity – unless their current first name also matches the new gender.

According to the law, the first name is still expected to correspond to the gender entry. For example, if you choose the entry “male”, you will not be able to enter Bettina or Julia as your name. 

Overall, there is still a choice between “male”, “female” and “diverse”. 

Those affected may also choose not to provide gender information. A separate change of the first name without changing the gender entry is not possible on the basis of the law on self-determination.

Why is the law controversial?

Protests against the law change have been bubbling up in the last few years, especially from the conservative spectrum. 

The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party wants to introduce a motion in the Bundestag this Friday, in which it calls for even greater hurdles than before for those affected. 

Some critics have suggested that the law could create incentives to have someone’s gender entry arbitrarily adjusted for nefarious purposes. Berliner Zeitung reported that the deputy chairwoman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group, Andrea Lindholz, said: “From November, it will be possible to change one’s identity with a simple declaration in front of the registry office and the security authorities will not know about this.”

Those affected categorically reject this portrayal and point out that no one takes this path voluntarily.

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