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Neo-Nazi murder inquiry botched?

February 25, 2015

Accusations that authorities hindered a probe into what turned out to be a neo-Nazi murder have been denied by the premier of Germany's central state of Hesse. Volker Bouffier says he has "nothing to hide."

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Volker Bouffier
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

Bouffier on Tuesday angrily denied that he covered up for Hesse state's own intelligence service in 2006 when he was the state's interior minister although authorities knew promptly that the murder could have had extreme right-wing links.

Internet café proprietor Halit Yozgat was shot dead in April 2006 in the state's northern city of Kassel.

Bildergalerie Neonazi Mordserie Halit Yozgat
Halit Yozgat was murdered in April 2006 in KasselImage: picture alliance / dpa

An intelligence service employee, identified only as Andreas T., had been in the vicinity shortly beforehand or during the murder.

The slaying of the businessman of Turkish origin was the last of nine anti-foreigner murders by the self-styled NSU group which now is the focus of a mammoth trial in Munich. Yozgat's family has applied to the court that Bouffier testify. The 10th NSU victim was a policewoman shot dead in 2007.

'Nothing to hide'

"I have nothing to hide," Bouffier said, while reading a prepared statement to press representatives including Hesse HR public broadcasting on Tuesday in Wiesbaden, where the Hesse assembly is based.

"These insinuations against me are a monstrosity, they are shameless, and I reject them in every way," Bouffier said, adding that he was ready to testify at the Munich NSU trial.

Referring to his actions as interior minister in 2006, Bouffier said: "I decided in accordance with the law on the basis of best (available) information and conscience."

Bouffier leads a regional coalition in Wiesbaden, comprising Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats and environment-focused Greens as the junior coalition partner.

Police transcript revealed

Last weekend, the German newspaper "Welt am Sonntag" published excerpts from a police surveillance transcript that suggested that Hesse' intelligence service must have known about the murder's anti-foreigner neo-Nazi connotations.

Andreas T. maintained links with an informant within the Kassel neo-Nazi scene, who at Munich trial said he was not permitted to say much. Munich trial files contained only a wiretap summary, the newspaper said.

Its report said police investigators had listened to and documented a telephone conversation between the intelligence service employee and his supervisor.

Deutschland Nancy Faeser SPD Politikerin aus Hessen
Faeser asks, what really went on in 2006?Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Arnold

'What really took place in Kassel'

On Monday, the general secretary of Hesse' opposition Social Democratic party (SPD), Nancy Faeser, said citizens had the right to know "what really took place in Kassel."

"In this context the premier must allow himself to be asked why he used an exclusion declaration to hinder the questioning of the informant by Andreas T.," Faeser said, referring to police attempts to get details from the informant.

Bouffie has argued that his advisors convinced him in 2006 that disclosing the informant's identity would have posed a greater danger in law enforcement terms.

Table documents, demand opposition

Faeser, who is a leading member of a state assembly committee of inquiry into the affair demanded on Tuesday that the relevant documents be tabled.

She said it was astounding that Bouffier was of the view that he could not contribute more information on events in 2006.

"He was at the time the interior minister responsible who apparently intervened massively twice in the investigation," Faeser added.

Fortsetzung NSU-Prozess 20.01.2015
Zschäpe is the main accused in MunichImage: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Müller

Bundestag inquiry also waiting

In Berlin, a Left party member of a parallel federal Bundestag parliament inquiry into the NSU murder series, Petra Pau, said it too had not received the surveillance transcripts related to Kassel in 2006.

The Munich trial was adjourned unexpectedly on Tuesday afternoon, when the presiding judge said the main accused Beate Zschäpe was ill.

The trial is to proceed on Wednesday with testimony from two more witnesses.

ipj/bw (dpa, HR)