Stade, Germany - Five Vietnamese men stayed silent Wednesday
on the first day of their trial in connection with the brutal killing
of seven staff at a Chinese restaurant in Germany last year.
It was the second trial for the group - three of whom are charged
with murder and two with aggravated robbery.
The previous hearing, which began at the end of August 2007 in the
town of Stade, near Hamburg, was halted in December because of the
illness of one of the judges.
Defence lawyers said all five would for the time being exercise
their legal right to silence.
A flood of defence objections delayed the formal reading of the
indictment. Attorneys contended the trial court was not legally
constituted, that they had not been given enough time to read police
files and that applications for bail had not been answered.
Lawyer Bernhard Docke and colleagues demanded the accused be
freed, saying it was very stressful for them to stay in jail.
The hearing ended after two hours, when a lawyer said he was too
ill to continue.
The court is to rule on the legal objections later.
The original trial made slow progress. The police case is based
mainly on forensic evidence and the defence fought every step of the
way.
Lawyers said the defendants had not understood translations by a
team of court-paid Vietnamese interpreters who had attended one of
the hearings, because they spoke another Vietnamese dialect.
Seven people were bound and slain in the attack in the nearby
country town of Sittensen, after the Lin Yue restaurant closed late
on February 4.
Five staff from Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Hong Kong were
tied up and shot along with popular local restaurant owner Danny Wing
Hong Fan, 32, and his 28-year-old wife, both British citizens. Only
their baby survived.
Police say three Vietnamese entered the restaurant to steal
valuables at gunpoint and may have killed the workers in panic. The
other two defendants were part of the plot, police say.
The Vietnamese have denied to police that they were the killers.
At trial, lawyer Armin von Doellen ridiculed the charges, saying
they failed to specify which of the accused fired the gun.
Prosecutor Johannes Kiers retorted, 'It's obvious that where there
is one gun, three people would not have each had a finger on the
trigger. They are co-accused in a joint act.'
The trial is expected to last until at least June, with 52 dates
set for hearings. Supplementary judges have been appointed this time
to step in in case any of the bench becomes disabled by illness.
© 2008 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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