Germany admits to colonial-era genocide against Namibia

Offers to pay $1.3bn
Germany yesterday admitted to committing genocide against the Herero and Nama ethnic groups over 100 years ago in the then German South West Africa, now Namibia.

As such, the German government offered to support Windhoek and the descendants of the victims with $1.3 billion (€1.1 billion) for reconstruction and development.

Tens of thousands of men, women and children were shot, tortured or driven into the Kalahari Desert to starve by German troops between 1904 and 1908 after the Herero and Nama tribes rebelled against colonial Germany.

But German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas yesterday asked for forgiveness for the “crimes of German colonial rule.”

“Our goal was and is to find a common path to genuine reconciliation in memory of the victims,” Maas said in a statement.

He added: “This includes naming the events of the German colonial period in what is now Namibia and in particular the atrocities in the period from 1904 to 1908, without sparing or glossing over them.

“We will now also officially call these events what they were from today’s perspective: a genocide.”

Namibian presidential press secretary Alfredo Hengari told CNN yesterday that his country saw the formal acceptance of the atrocities as genocide as a key step in the process of reconciliation and reparation.

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