Berlin - German President Horst Koehler joined in the debate
Sunday over controversial proposals by the country's interior
minister to combat terrorism, including internment without trial and
the possible targetted killing of terrorist suspects.
Koehler urged Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble to show
restraint in presenting ideas which he said could unnecessary
unsettle the population.
It was the duty of the minister 'to wrack his brains' over the
best way to protect citizens, the president said in an interview on
Germany's second television channel ZDF. But the staccato 'manner in
which the suggestions came about' was not ideal.
Schaeuble called for legal powers to intern terrorist 'combatants'
before they struck and said that Germany might have to introduce a
US-style criminal offence of conspiracy to commit a crime.
The minister, who outlined his thoughts in the news magazine Der
Spiegel last week, also proposed a ban on the use of the internet and
mobile phones by people the state deemed to be dangerous.
Schaeuble also called for clarification under what conditions the
constitution permits the state to target and kill terrorists.
President Koehler said he had his doubts whether 'the killing of a
suspected terrorist without a court ruling could be treated so
lightly.'
The minister's remarks, particularly those about targetted
assassinations, provoked outrage in Germany, with opposition Greens
party leader Claudia Roth calling on him to resign.
Schaeuble, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian
Democrats (CDU), defended his views, saying: 'You must take risks to
defend liberty, but you can't just sit back and do nothing either.'
But the Social Democrats (SPD), who have been in a power-sharing
government with the CDU since November 2005, warned that the
minister's remarks could threaten the continuation of the coalition.
'The grand coalition cannot put up for ever with with Schaeuble is
doing,' said Ralf Stegner, SPD interior minister in the northern
state of Schleswig Holstein. 'Frau Merkel has to tell him, 'enough is
enough',' he said in an interview with the Bild am Sonntag newspaper.
SPD chairman Kurt Beck accused Schaeuble of being excessive and
losing sight of his goals.
'His proposals far surpass the current constitutional consensus.
He wants to protect freedom to death,' Beck told Sunday's Frankfurter
Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.
Schaeuble's proposals came in the wake of the failed car bomb
attacks in London and Glasgow. Germany had a similar scare in July
last year when authorities defused two suitcase bombs Islamic
militants placed on trains.
© 2007 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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