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By Lee Seung-joon
Three neo-Nazis have been charged with the murders of 10 people, mainly foreigners, during the past 11 years, shocking Germany.
German society, which has been assessed to have handled past atrocities in a smart manner, has been put into whirlwind of harsh criticism on the grounds that the authorities concerned underestimated attacks by extreme rightists as seen in these murders.
According to local Der Spiegel and other German media, the killings were unveiled in unexpected incidents involving two men and one women, who have claimed to be members of the National Socialist Underground (NSU).
Bank robbers, Uwe Boehnhardt, 34, and Uwe Mundlos, 38, were found to have committed suicide in a caravan in Eisenach, Thueringen, Germany, on Nov. 4 and their female accomplice Beate Zschaepe, 36, was found to have fled after setting a fire to a house in Zwickau, Sachsen, 180 kilometers away three days later.
The two incidents seemed to have no relation to each other. But they were found to be linked as it was revealed that the home in Zwickau was the shelter of the two bank robbers. The police found the phrase “German Tour -- Nine Turks shot” on a placard in a 15-minute DVD animation collected from the burnt-out home. A gun similar with that used in the serial murder of Turkish immigrants from 2000 to 2006 has been collected there.
The crime was brought to light when the female accomplice confessed upon surrendering to the police a few days later. The investigation shows that the three were have found to have killed a total of 10 people ― eight Turkish immigrants, one Greek man and one policewoman.
German Prime Minister Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats voted during congress in Leipzig on Tuesday to push for tough action and intensify the fight against the NSU supporters.
"You cannot help being left with the dreadful impression that the danger of extremists from NSU wasn't taken seriously enough," said Thomas Oppermann, a member of the opposition Social Democrats.
Though the story of Nazi’s existence is a sensitive topic in German history, experts have warned about the young extremists in eastern regions of the country where unemployment is very high. In the past, newspapers reported that a security agent was very close to the scene of crime in six of the cases; therefore people are wondering if the intelligence service has been doing its task of protecting society.
"There is much to indicate that the intelligence services did not fulfill their task. They failed," said veteran Greens lawmaker Hans Christian Stroebele.
"Not only did they let huge risks develop but probably 10 or more people have been murdered. Post-war Germany has not known this kind of drama until now," he also told to the German channel N-TV.
Some of the victims’ family members said that they knew all along the murderers were the work of racist extremists.