SHARE
COPY LINK

CRIME

Son of Nazi Dr. Death tries to kill him off

The son of Aribert Heim, the last big Nazi war criminal still being hunted by authorities, has spoken to the press for the first time, telling Bild am Sonntag he is trying to get his father declared dead so he can get control of his money.

Son of Nazi Dr. Death tries to kill him off
Possible faces Photo:DPA

Aribert Heim was the medical doctor at Mauthausen concentration camp in Austria. He was dubbed “Doctor Death” due to the hideous “experiments” he conducted on prisoners, killing many and torturing more.

Despite being arrested and questioned by the Allies immediately after the war, he was released and led a seemingly respectful life as a doctor in Baden Baden, until details of his crimes emerged in the early 1960s.

He fled in 1962 as police moved to arrest him, and has not been seen since.

Now his son Rüdiger, 52, says he and his mother received mysterious notes in their letter box during the following five years.

“Between 1962 and 1967 two notes appeared in our post box. There was a single sentence written on them “I am doing fine.” But whether these letters were really from my father, I don’t know.”

Heim is thought by investigators to be in Chile, where a daughter of his lives, but despite a number of supposed sightings, they have been unable to find him.

Heim junior is adamant he has no idea where his father is. When asked what he would do if he knew, he said, “I would shout out to the whole world that he should give himself up and answer these terrible charges.

“The past of my father is a part of my life. To deny that would be pointless, although I don’t have to explain to anyone that I am no Nazi – anyone who knows me knows that.”

He said he was working with a lawyer to work out how to have his father declared missing and then dead, in order to gain control over the more than one million euros in a Berlin bank under his father’s name.

“We only found out about this bank account in 1997. If I was actually the heir, I would donate the money – for the historical examination of the suffering in the Mauthausen concentration camp.”

Efraim Zuroff, head of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Jerusalem is convinced the now 94-year-old is still alive, and living in South America. The Nazi hunter is still trying to find him.

Heim junior said, “I can’t even remember when I saw him for the last time in 1962. I grew up fatherless in the house of my grandparents. I don’t know where he lives, nor do I finance his flight. If he were dead, I would not know where he is buried.”

It was only several years after Heim had fled the wealthy home that his son even learned about his crimes.

“My mother always told me he had left to work as a doctor in Berlin. I believed this story until I was 12 years old. Only then did the suspicion arise, piece by piece, that his absence could have had something to do with the terrible events in the concentration camp. This became certain for me when the allegations against Aribert Heim were made public in the press in 1978.”

CRIME

Why are German politicians facing increasing attacks?

A series of attacks on politicians in recent weeks show that politics in Germany has become extremely polarised. With tensions running high ahead of EU elections, The Local takes a look at recent violent incidents, and why they are increasing.

Why are German politicians facing increasing attacks?

Police in Stuttgart said two state lawmakers received minor injuries after being attacked Wednesday evening at an event for the 75th anniversary of Germany’s constitution.

The two politicians were members of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, and two women, 19 and 23, are under investigation for the incident.

This is just the latest in a spate of attacks suffered by politicians from various parties across Germany in recent weeks.

Among the more severe was an attack on Matthias Eck, a member of the Social Democrats (SPD) party, who was hanging up election posters around Dresden on May 3rd when four people accosted him. According to ZDF, eyewitnesses heard one of the attackers yell “f*cking Greens” before they began punching and kicking him. Ecke later required an operation in the hospital.

Just before the attack on Ecke, a Greens campaigner had been attacked on the same street. Based on matching descriptions of the perpetrators and spatial proximity of the crimes, police assume it was the same attackers in both cases.

READ ALSO: Teenager turns self in after attack on German politician

Another notably violent attack was carried out in a Berlin library against the capital city’s senator for economic affairs and former mayor, Franziska Giffey (SDP). Police said that the attacker had come “from behind with a bag filled with hard contents and hit her on the head and neck”. A 74 year old man was suspected of carrying out the attack and he was later arrested.

A number of other attacks and threats against Green party and AfD politicians were reported within the week. Green party members Kai Gehring and Rolf Fliß were attacked in Essen after a party event.

Demonstrators in Brandenburg harassed Green politician Katrin Göring-Eckardt while she was in her car and prevented her from leaving. 

In Nordhorn, Lower Saxony, a man threw an egg at an AfD state parliament member and hit him in the face. 

A troublesome trend of violent responses to politics

Politically motivated extremist attacks are not new to Germany, but the increase in the number of attacks recently is cause for concern, especially for local political leaders.

Following the attack she experienced, Giffey posted on Instagram saying that she was fine, but added that she was “worried and shaken by the increasingly wild culture” observed in German politics.

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Franziska Giffey (@franziskagiffey)

Chancellor Olaf Scholz had responded to the attack on Matthias Ecke, calling the attack a threat to democracy.

A number of similar attacks and threats were also recorded in 2023, including an attack on Andreas Jurca (AfD) in Augsburg, and the blockade of a ferry with Federal Minister of Economics Robert Habeck on board.

According to preliminary figures released by the federal government, recorded crimes against politicians have risen since 2019 for all parties – from 2,267 in 2019 to 2,790 in 2023.

In 2019, AfD representatives were most often the targets of attacks, whereas in 2023 it was predominately the Greens.

These numbers also include cases of property damage and threats or insults.

anti-extremism demo in Dresden

Participants at a rally against extremism in response to the attack on Matthias Ecke in Dresden. A man holds a sign reading “Stop hate preachers”. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Sebastian Kahnert

What’s causing an increase in extremism in Germany?

Dr. Stefan Marschall, professor of political science at the Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, says there has been an increase in polarisation in politics in Germany.

Marschall told The Local that this polarisation means more and more often “people who think differently are perceived as enemies”. He added that, as opposed to the US where people are largely split between two more or less equally strong camps, in Germany radical groups take aim at their counterparts on the other side of the political spectrum and also at the more moderate majority.

“Vilifying political elites is part of the core strategy of right-wing populist parties,” Marschall said.

But understanding the issues contributing to political extremism and fixing them are two different things. Furthermore, Marschall notes that citizens’ attitudes and beliefs can be changed only to a limited extent by institutions.

That said, the political scientist suggests that communication is key for mitigating these radical acts: “Overall, there needs to be greater awareness that polarised and divisive language benefits populist parties in particular”.

Social media shares some responsibility here too, as communication and information sharing platforms have made it easier to mobilise protest as well as violence.

READ ALSO: A fight for the youth vote – Are German politicians social media savvy enough?

Can the tension be expected to ease after the EU elections?

Asked if the number of attacks might decrease following the EU elections in June, Marschall pointed out that elections always bring a higher rate of attacks on political figures: “Election campaigns are always heated times in which such incidents are more likely because politicians literally take to the streets.”

But there have also been a number of incidents observed outside of election cycles.

“We are now realising that democracy is vulnerable, after democracy has long been taken for granted,” Marschall said. “That is why people are now rightly talking and thinking about how to protect democracy institutionally and how to set an example for democratic culture. Ultimately, this strengthens democratic resilience.”

On Sunday thousands of protestors rallied in Dresden to stand against right-wing extremism following the attacks on Matthias Ecke. In Berlin too, around 1,000 people gathered in front of Brandenburg Gate.

But considering the number of political attacks already seen in 2024, for now it looks like political extremism can be expected to get worse before it gets better.

SHOW COMMENTS