Advertisement

Officials 'tried to erase rape' from Cologne NYE report

DPA/The Local
DPA/The Local - [email protected]
Officials 'tried to erase rape' from Cologne NYE report
Cologne central station. Photo: DPA

A high-ranking police officer has alleged that his seniors tried to strike the word rape from an internal police report after the mass sexual assaults in Cologne over New Year.

Advertisement

A chief superintendent in the Cologne police told the investigative committee established in the wake of the attacks that the interior ministry in North Rhine-Westphalia had sought to influence the investigations.

The officer explained that an official from the ministry had called about a rape charge mentioned in an internal police report.

"That isn’t rape. Get rid of it. Delete the report," the ministry official said, according to the chief superintendent.

The rape report was made by a young woman who alleges she was surrounded by a group of around 50 men, some of whom pushed their fingers inside of her.

When he complained about the caller’s angry and abrupt tone, the official replied "these are the orders from the ministry. I’m simply passing them on."

The 52-year-old chief inspector said that he had never in his career experienced an intervention of this nature from the ministry.

But he said he did not believe it was part of a cover-up.

"They didn’t understand what is meant by rape," he suggested.

Hundreds of women filed complaints in the days and weeks after the attacks with police, alleging that they had been sexually assaulted or robbed by groups of men around Cologne’s central train station.

In the days after the attacks, allegations were made that the police had sought to cover up the crimes, due to the fact that they appeared to have been committed by men with a migrant background.

In March police conceded that they had almost half the number of officers on duty during the assaults as they had originally claimed. A police report published the day after the attacks claimed 140 officers were present at the scene, when in fact at most only 80 were present.

The sexual assaults on New Year's Eve have brought stronger calls for reforms to Germany's law on rape. Proponents for change say the law doesn't sufficiently protect victims because it does not mention consent and courts often place too much emphasis on whether a victim physically resisted.

More

Join the conversation in our comments section below. Share your own views and experience and if you have a question or suggestion for our journalists then email us at [email protected].
Please keep comments civil, constructive and on topic – and make sure to read our terms of use before getting involved.

Please log in to leave a comment.

See Also