Greek bailout crisis: Athens threatens to seize German assets 'as compensation for Nazi war crimes'
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Greece has threatened to seize German assets as compensation
for Nazi war crimes – 70 years after the end of the Second World War. The threat, made by the Greek justice minister and reported
in the daily Kathimerini newspaper, has been supported by Prime
Minister Alexis Tsipras, who told the Greek parliament he would pursue the
“very technical and sensitive” matter.
Justice minister Nikos Paraskevopoulos has reportedly called
for “war reparations, the repayment of a forced loan and the return of
antiquities” from Germany, and said that an old court ruling gave him the power
to sanction “the foreclosure of German assets in Greece” as a form of
compensation.
The issue was dismissed out of hand by Germany, with Angela
Merkel’s spokesperson rejecting questions about reparations that “have been
legally and politically resolved”. “We should concentrate on current issues
and, hopefully, what will be a good future,” Steffen Seibert said.
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“Germany is very aware of its moral obligation to keep alive
the memory of Germany's guilt for the Second World War and the suffering it
caused in many countries. That doesn't change anything about the legal and
political assessment of the question of compensation and reparations.”
But it represents a further souring of relations between
Athens and Berlin, already fraught amid the ongoing wrangling over Greece's
financial bailout. Germany has been at the forefront of countries demanding
strict austerity measures from Greece in return for financial aid.
“We should look forward together,” German Finance Ministry
spokesman Martin Jaeger told reporters in Berlin. “Making these emotional and
backward-looking allegations doesn't help in the context of the work we need to
tackle together with the Greeks.