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GERHARD SCHRÖDER

Germany’s Social Democrats move to expel Gerhard Schröder over Putin ties

Germany's ruling Social Democrats (SPD) launched proceedings Thursday that could see former chancellor Gerhard Schröder expelled from the party over his close ties to Vladimir Putin and Russian energy companies.

Gerhard Schröder Olaf Scholz
Gerhard Schröder takes part in an event at the launch of Olaf Scholz's biography, "The Way to Power" in December 2021. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Christoph Soeder

The SPD’s Hanover branch opened a hearing to discuss more than a dozen motions from local and regional chapters against Schröder’s ongoing membership, with a decision expected in three weeks.

Schröder has “decided that his financial and personal dependence on Putin is more important than his commitment to the SPD or the legacy of his chancellorship,” senior party member Thomas Kutschaty told the Rheinische Post daily.

Schröder, German chancellor from 1998 to 2005, has condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as unjustified but has refused to turn his back on his friend in the Kremlin, becoming an embarrassment to the SPD.

He has also been widely criticised for holding a number of lucrative posts at Russian energy giants, and it was only after much public pressure that Schröder in May gave up his seat on the board of Russian energy group Rosneft.

He later also announced he would not be joining Gazprom’s supervisory board as initially planned.

Germany’s parliament in May removed some of the perks Schroeder was entitled to as an elder statesman, stripping him of an office and staff.

READ ALSO: Germany strips Schröder of official perks over links to Russia

Schröder, 78, has remained defiant and is expected to fight efforts to kick him out of the SPD.

“I will not give up my opportunities for dialogue with President Putin,” Schroeder recently told the Frankfurter Allgemeine newspaper.

Legal experts say there are high hurdles for expelling members from the party, and Schroeder will be able to appeal any decision against him.

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GERMANY AND RUSSIA

Exiled Russian dissidents in Germany get rare boost from freed activists

It is thought that almost 2,000 Russian activists have been granted asylum in Germany since the beginning of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. After the major prisoner swap, freed activists are being supported by the exile community.

Exiled Russian dissidents in Germany get rare boost from freed activists

Hundreds from Germany’s Russian community cheered him on at a rally held on a balmy summer’s evening at a park where the Berlin Wall once stood, as police kept a close watch on the event.

Yashin, 41, who had been jailed after criticising Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, called for the release of other “steadfast” political prisoners and exhorted the crowd to keep up the fight against President Vladimir Putin, whom he branded a “war criminal”.

Many well-wishers chanted Yashin’s name while others waved an anti-war version of the Russian flag with the red stripe removed.

One of those in the crowd was Natasha Ivanova, of the Demokrati-JA group of Russian dissidents in Germany, who said the exchange in August was the “first piece of good news we have had in many years”.

“It was unbelievable, we weren’t used to that anymore,” said 50-year-old Ivanova, looking back at years when news from the homeland was mostly of “destruction, arrests, torture”.

Perhaps the biggest blow was the death of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who was originally meant to be part of the exchange but died in an Arctic prison in February.

Activists in Berlin say they know that Moscow has also targeted its opponents abroad — including in the very heart of the German capital.

One of the those traded in the multi-country exchange was Russian operative Vadim Krasikov, who had been jailed in Germany for the 2019 murder of a former Chechen separatist in Berlin’s central Tiergarten park.

READ ALSO: Germany’s ‘deal with the devil’ in Russia prisoner swap

‘Agents and contract killers’

Yashin told German media this week that he was aware that Russian “agents and contract killers can be everywhere” and recounted recently being filmed by a suspicious man in a Berlin cafe.

Nevertheless, he declined the offer of police protection, he told Germany’s Funke Media group, reasoning that “I didn’t even have bodyguards in Moscow, so why should I have any here?”

In the days after the rally, Ivanova also met two of the other freed detainees, veteran human rights advocate Oleg Orlov and activist Andrei Pivovarov.

 Russian journalist and activist Vladimir Kara-Murza, Russian activist Andrei Pivovarov and Russian opposition figure Ilya Yashin address a press conference on August 2, 2024 in Bonn, western Germany, one day after they were released from Russia as political prisoners in one of the biggest prisoner swaps between Russia and the West since the end of the Cold War.

Russian journalist and activist Vladimir Kara-Murza, Russian activist Andrei Pivovarov and Russian opposition figure Ilya Yashin address a press conference on August 2, 2024 in Bonn, western Germany, one day after they were released from Russia as political prisoners in one of the biggest prisoner swaps between Russia and the West since the end of the Cold War. Photo by INA FASSBENDER / AFP

“It was very moving to be able to have such a direct meeting with those who had just been saved,” she said.

Following Navalny’s death, there have been signs that the presence of the freed prisoners in Germany may give fresh energy to the work of the exile community.

Germany hosts by far the EU’s biggest community of Russian nationals – more than 250,000. Russian dissident activity has been centred in Baltic states, but Berlin has also become a hub for many.

German media reported early this year that almost 2,000 Russian activists have been granted asylum in Germany since the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Ivanova said she and others were ready to help the new arrivals “in any way they can”, pointing out that their time behind bars had given them a special “authority”.

“They must avoid arguing amongst themselves as can happen sometimes, unfortunately,” she added.

‘Way back to freedom’

Orlov, 71, a co-founder of the Memorial rights group, said he was busy dealing with his German paperwork but planned to “work together with elements of civil society in exile… here in Germany”.

He was speaking as the guest of honour at the opening of an exhibition in the eastern city of Weimar focusing on Memorial, which Russian authorities disbanded in 2021 and which was a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize the following year.

Like Yashin – who said the swap was a “deportation from Russia against my will” – Orlov emphasised that he wants “to return to Russia as soon as the opportunity presents itself”.

“However, if I went back now it would be with the 100 percent probability of going back to jail,” he said.

Asked whether he felt safe in Germany, Orlov said with a wry smile: “Honestly I don’t know why they would attack me here — anything they wanted to do with me, they could have done in Russia.”

“On the other hand, as we say in Russia: We are all on God’s earth and nobody is free from all danger.”

Orlov said that reflecting on Memorial’s work and its ban had brought up the question of whether his activism had been in vain, given the deterioration of human rights in Russia.

Nevertheless he said that he was “convinced that Russia will at some point find its way back to freedom and all that we have done in this time will help Russia”.

By Jastinder KHERA

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