04/07/2011 03:49 PM

Torture? Execution?


German Justice Through the Eyes of a Somali Pirate


By Beate Lakotta in Hamburg

A courtroom in Hamburg is the scene of a head-on collision between two
worlds as the German justice system tries 10 Somali pirates who hijacked a
cargo ship. The pirates, some of whom are under 18, had no idea what a court
or a trial was and were afraid they would be tortured -- or executed -- by
the judge.

This odyssey is Abdiwali's fate, and only God knows how it will end. It
almost came to an end for him once before, in the Indian Ocean. 

They had been held on board the Dutch warship Tromp, where Dutch marines had
blindfolded them and secured them to the deck with handcuffs. Abdiwali was
terrified that they would be tortured, so much so that he managed to loosen
his handcuffs and jump overboard, hundreds of nautical miles off the Somali
coast. 

As he watched the Tromp slip away in the cool, smooth waters, he expected to
be attacked by a shark. "I wanted the ocean to swallow me. I preferred to
die quickly," he says today. Instead, they returned to fish him out of the
water. Abdiwali swam a few strokes in an attempt to get away, but then he
gave up, realizing trying to swim away from a frigate was pointless. He wept
as they pulled him out of the water.

Abdiwali was eventually brought to Hamburg, where he now presses his face
against the vision slit in the prisoner transport vehicle every time he is
taken to court. First the port flies by, and then the vehicle travels
through the tunnel under the river and along the wide streets of downtown
Hamburg, with its magnificent buildings. He has never seen anything as
beautiful as this city.

It's so clean outside, as if everything had been licked clean. There is no
trash. There are no wrecked buildings riddled with bullet holes. The people
walk around in coats and hats. He too was given warm clothing, after
arriving here in a T-shirt and sandals -- the uniform of a Somali pirate.

Trying to Understand German Justice 

Since last November, Abdiwali has seen the free world fly by outside the
prisoner transport vehicle twice a week, when he is taken from the youth
prison far out on a bleak peninsula jutting into the Elbe River to the
courthouse, which looks like a castle from the front. But defendants arrive
in the back of the building, through the basement of the pretrial detention
center, which looks more like a dungeon.

The officers take the Somalis through long, dark hallways until they finally
reach the door to the courtroom, with its pale white walls, as large as a
gymnasium with high ceilings. None of the 10 Somalis on trial has ever been
in a courtroom before. They have been in Germany for almost a year now, and
yet none of them knows the language or the customs of this country. All they
know are the prison and this courtroom. Abdiwali's seat is in the last row
where the defendants sit. He is flanked by Rainer Pohlen and Markus
Blumenstein, his defense lawyers. He puts on the simultaneous interpretation
headphones for Somali and tries to get his head around his fate.

It began on April 5, 2010. The MV Taipan, a container ship owned by the
Hamburg-based shipping company Komrowski, was 530 nautical miles east of the
Horn of Africa, en route from Djibouti to Mombasa, Kenya. The vessel was
sailing under the German flag, which meant that under international maritime
law it is effectively considered a floating piece of German territory in the
Indian Ocean. In the calm waters, the Taipan was a sitting duck when the
pirates attacked.

Their mother ship was the Hud Hud, an Indian dhow. From there, they
approached the Taipan in small, open speedboats known as skiffs. The pirates
fired at the bridge with Kalashnikovs, and also apparently used a grenade
launcher. The bullets pierced windows and steel bulkheads. Using ladders and
ropes, 10 pirates boarded the Taipan and searched the ship. But they
couldn't find the crew, who had fled into a hidden safe room. 

Caught Red-Handed 

Before going to the safe room, the crew had sent out a distress call. One of
the ships that received the call was the Dutch frigate Tromp, which was
searching for pirates nearby as part of the European Union's anti-piracy
"Operation Atalanta." 

A helicopter took off from the Tromp, and elite soldiers in combat gear slid
down ropes while others provided covering fire. They liberated the crew and
detained the pirates. One of them was Abdiwali M., who said that he was 16.

The Dutch marines could have disarmed the pirates and dropped them off in a
skiff near the Somali coast, as is sometimes done with suspects. However,
these 10 men had been caught red-handed, and they hadn't even thrown their
weapons overboard. But because the Dutch didn't want to be stuck with the
pirates, the Somalis were handed over to the Germans.

Not surprisingly, Abdiwali had never heard of the principle of universal
jurisdiction under international law, which served as the legal basis for
his odyssey. Under the universal jurisdiction principle, piracy is an
internationally outlawed offence. According to the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), it can be prosecuted on the high seas at any
time and by almost every country on earth. But since Kenya recently withdrew
from a treaty under which it had agreed to conduct the costly piracy trials
in its courts in return for payment from the West, the industrialized
nations have had to come up with their own solutions to dealing with the
pirates. This is a new set of circumstances, and it is one of the reasons
the world is now looking to Hamburg with such great interest.

Hung from the Yardarm 

In the past, pirates were hung from the yardarm or dumped into the sea. In
Somalia, their hands and feet would be chopped off, at the very least. The
German government, however, has had 10 pirates transported 6,000 kilometers
to grant them a fair trial. In this sense, the trial in courtroom 337 at the
Hamburg district court is also providing Germany with a chance to reaffirm
the superiority of its democratic values, including its commitment to the
rule of law. 

The pirates are being charged with attacking maritime traffic and abduction
with intent to extort money, for which the maximum penalty is 15 years for
adults and 10 for minors. It ought to be a short trial, given the amount of
evidence piled up in the room where the court keeps its exhibits: ladders,
knives, pistols, five assault rifles, two grenade launchers and a cricket
bat.

On the other hand, the Dutch also fired their weapons, leading to questions
like: Who was responsible for which bullet holes? Evidence deteriorates
quickly in the salty sea air. There are no fingerprints, and most of the
defendants have been tight-lipped. Nevertheless, the court is leaving no
stone unturned in its effort to prove who did the shooting and what kinds of
weapons were used. If the rule of law is supposed to be a universal
principle, there can be no second-class justice for Somali pirates.

Each pirate has two defense lawyers, and because everything has to be
translated, three Somali interpreters are working in shifts to accommodate
the many witnesses brought in from abroad. Polyglot murmurs fill the
courtroom. Three professional judges are presiding over the case, assisted
by a supplementary judge, two public prosecutors, two lay judges, 10 court
bailiffs (one for each defendant). When the shipping and travel costs are
factored in, the entire proceedings will cost German taxpayers at least half
a million euros.

'I Just Wanted to Survive' 

The question is: How much sense does it make to conduct a trial against
defendants from a country where there is little food, no work, no
functioning state and no legal system?

Somalia, a failed state where there are more weapons than food, has been at
war with itself for the last 20 years. It is a place of hunger and
suffering, where Islamist al-Shabab militias inflict terror and the law of
the jungle rules. Civilians are killed seemingly at random, women are raped
and children are recruited as child soldiers. Can Western ideas of law and
order even be applied to people from such a traumatized country?

This is how Abdiwali sees it: "What I did cannot be justified. But the court
should know that I wasn't trying to hijack a ship to get rich. I just wanted
to survive."

This too is an issue that the criminal court, under presiding Judge Bernd
Steinmetz, will have to address in its search for a fair punishment. In an
enlightened legal system, punishment is not an end in itself. Instead, it
must fulfill a purpose, such as to deter copycats, strengthen the awareness
of norms within society or rehabilitate criminals. But a verdict handed down
in Hamburg, no matter how draconian, will have no effect in Somalia. This
leaves the purpose of reintegrating the offender into society.

The only question is: Which society?

'I Wouldn't Go Back to Somalia for a Million Dollars'

The 10 pirates will not be sent back because there is a de facto ban on
deportations from Germany to Somalia. "I love my country," says Abdiwali,
"but I don't want to die. I wouldn't go back to Somalia for a million
dollars." 

Even if he wanted to return, how would he travel to the other end of the
world as a person without documents or money? There are not even scheduled
transportation connections to Somalia. In other words, Abdiwali will be
staying in Germany.

Abdiwali is an attractive boy with short-cropped hair, soft facial features
and almost no facial hair. At least two of the other defendants are also
quite young. This creates another challenge for the court: If its purpose is
to demonstrate fairness and the rule of law, its treatment of the young
defendants must be exemplary. It cannot treat an adolescent pirate from
Somalia worse than it would treat a young offender from Germany.

Attorney Rainer Pohlen insists that, in juvenile law, the emphasis should be
on the educational rather than the penal aspect of punishment. Only when all
other measures prove to be insufficient can the court impose a custodial
sentence. Germany's juvenile criminal law stipulates that the goal of the
punishment must be to educate the offender. But Abdiwali must first be able
to learn German before he can be educated. In pretrial detention, he has
received three hours a month of German instruction.

"What is the point of imprisoning an adolescent who is experiencing a free
society for the first time in his life?" asks Pohlen. "No one here will
encourage him to hijack a ship. He doesn't have to starve here, and he will
have opportunities to develop. There is no reason to assume that he would
become criminal in Germany."

Under German juvenile law, remand detention can only be imposed in
exceptional cases. But no one was harmed on the Taipan, and Abdiwali says
that he did not shoot a weapon. The court would have to prove that he
committed another offence.

Integrated into German Society 

The youth welfare office has assigned Walter Hubert to serve as Abdiwali's
guardian. Hubert has experience with criminal careers. His wards have
included thugs and stabbers, "but pretrial detention has been extremely
rare." Hubert is convinced that "if Abdiwali were from Hamburg, he wouldn't
be there."

Pohlen and his fellow attorney, Markus Blumenstein, have petitioned the
court to release Abdiwali from pretrial detention. Hubert has also made it
clear to the court that this is what he recommends. He argues that because
Abdiwali will not be deported, he will have to become integrated into German
society as quickly as possible. The boy seems bright, Hubert argues. He
suggests that Abdiwali could be housed in a managed apartment reserved for
youths on trial. While the trial is underway, he could spend seven hours a
week learning German, go to school and be enrolled in a vocational training
program.

It had been touted as the most spectacular case of the year. But now the
trial revolves around concepts like accountability, criminal liability and
the age at which youth offenders are determined to be legally culpable --
all concepts that mean nothing to the defendants. The Somali language
doesn't even have words for many of these ideas. 

The scene in courtroom 337 represents a collision between two worlds: that
of the German judiciary, in which each sheet of paper is numbered and a code
is assigned to each motion, and that of Somali reality. One pirate stated
that he was born under a tree, while another could only say that he was born
during the rainy season. When asked for the exact date, he said that he
didn't know, not even roughly.

Estimating Ages 

Besides Abdiwali, four other pirates told the court that they were under 21.
One insists that he is only 13, which would make him a child and legally
incapable of crime. Ironically, the witness testimony suggests that this
alleged 13-year-old used a grenade launcher.

Abdiwali is the only defendant the court has recognized as a minor to date.
It hasn't decided yet how it intends to prosecute two others. The court has
obtained expert reports in an attempt to estimate their age, but it is not
clear how reliable they are. Based on a wrist X-ray, a Dutch expert
estimated that the defendant who claims to be 13 is "15 or older." The
experts in Hamburg, however, are convinced that he is "18 or older." How
should the court proceed?

Older defendants would present less of a challenge to prosecutors. The court
spent several days deliberating over whether so-called growth plates, which
are found in the bones of children and adolescents but not of adults, could
be considered reliable indicators of age. When an expert on wrist bones from
the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf was called to testify, he
projected X-rays onto a screen in the courtroom. He proceeded to deliver a
lecture on calcification in the sesamoid bone of the thumb, bone stages and
skeleton age, percentile curves, sectional imaging and summation methods,
the 20-bone method, point values and diagrams -- all based on data obtained
from Central Europeans.

But does any of this apply to people of a different ethnicity, not to
mention people who were malnourished and had to work hard from an early age?

'I Was Scared to Death' 

For Abdiwali, the testimony of the medical professors solved another
mystery. After his arrival in Germany, he was taken to a large building,
where he saw people walking around in white coats. There was no interpreter,
and he didn't know why he was there. A man gave him instructions using hand
gestures: undress, naked. Then the man touched his body and looked at his
genitalia. "I was scared to death," says Abdiwali. "I was submissive, and I
did everything they wanted."

The images of Abu Ghraib had also been seen in Somalia. Abdiwali thought to
himself: Soon they'll show up with dogs, then I'll get the electroshocks and
then they'll execute me. When he was told to place his left hand on a metal
plate, he thought: Now they're going to cut off my hand! Instead, he only
heard a humming noise and a click.

Then he was told to place his head in a large cradle. They pushed something
hard between his teeth, and he thought: They're going to crush my skull like
a nut. More humming and clicking. Then they brought him back to the prison.

Only when Abdiwali saw the X-rays in the courtroom did he understand that it
was the same thing they do with tuberculosis patients in Somalia. He had
heard about such images, but he had never seen one. Now he knew that he had
been in a hospital.

It had never occurred to anyone to explain any of this to him.

Nightmares of Being Stabbed by the Judge

It's a cold February day, and Pohlen and an interpreter have driven out to
Hamburg's Hahnöfersand juvenile detention center. Abdiwali comes in from
outside, where he was shoveling snow and raking leaves. He likes the work.
He is wearing a green parka, blue tracksuit pants and heavy lace-up shoes
that are still coated in mud. 

Pohlen, 57, is from the western city of Mönchengladbach and has the cheerful
disposition considered typical of people from the Rhine area. With his
shoulder-length black hair, he looks not unlike a pirate himself. He pulls a
chocolate bar out of his bag and says: "Well, my boy, how are you?"

"I was so excited that you were coming that I didn't sleep for four days,"
says Abdiwali. He is so shy that he almost speaks in a whisper. "I'm so
lonely here. No one comes to visit me." He is desperate for human contact,
maybe even a foster family. "Can you do something?" he asks. "Please, show
some compassion!"

Enforcing the Sentence 

He is occasionally allowed to call his family in Somalia, and when he speaks
with his brothers and sisters, there are always tears. They pray for him,
but they don't understand what is happening to him, and he can't explain it
to them, either.

For the last seven nights, he has had nightmares in which Judge Steinmetz
stabs him in the stomach with a knife. Pohlen pats him on the shoulder, half
comforting and half in amusement, and tells him that things won't get that
bad.

"I think he's serious," says the interpreter, who left Somalia more than 20
years ago. When Pohlen asks the boy what he means, it turns out that
Abdiwali believes that the uniformed bailiffs are soldiers and the people in
the visitors' gallery are members of the secret police. He can't tell the
many people in black robes apart. He is convinced that the prosecutor, who
has such a low opinion of him, will pronounce the verdict and that he will
be tortured. He thinks that, in the end, the man in charge, who sits in the
middle at the front of the room and asks so many questions, will be the one
to enforce the sentence.

Abdiwali believes that Steinmetz is his executioner.

'No Death Penalty' 

Dr. Bernd Steinmetz, 52, the presiding judge of the 3rd Criminal Division,
is a somewhat short, friendly man with an alert gaze, gray hair and delicate
facial features. He comes across as being cultivated, respectable and
polite, almost excessively so. He treats everyone the same, whether it's the
public prosecutor, the frigate captain or the defendants, who sit in front
of him wearing prison-issue jackets and trousers that are much too big for
them.

Steinmetz has meticulously prepared himself for this trial, which is the
biggest case of his career. The white bowtie worn by judges suits him. He
looks like he could just as well be a violinist in a string quartet or a
Latin teacher. Someone would have to come from a very different world indeed
to imagine that he could be an executioner.

Pohlen is flabbergasted.

"But you must know by now that there is no death penalty in Germany?"

"I don't know that."

"No one can be executed in this country," Pohlen explains. "Capital
punishment was abolished 60 years ago. And torture is forbidden. So is
cutting off hands."

Explaining the Rule of Law 

Abdiwali nods, but he doesn't look very convinced. He was told that pirates
are beheaded in Hamburg. "That was Störtebeker," says Pohlen, referring to a
legendary German pirate from the Middle Ages. "But that was 600 years ago.
Now we live in a modern democracy based on the rule of law."

"What is the rule of law? And what is the court?" Abdiwali asks. "Who is
responsible? I don't understand any of this. Can you explain it to me?"

Pohlen explains it to Abdiwali in as simple terms as possible. He says that
the court is part of the state's justice system, and that the people at the
long table in the front are the court. He explains the public prosecutor's
job, how the court arrives at a verdict at the end of a trial and what kind
of punishment he can expect. "So, let's assume that the court were to
sentence you to three years and six months. Then they would deduct the time
you already served in pretrial detention, and you would get out after
two-thirds of the sentence, which would be…"

The interpreter interrupts Pohlen. "Just a moment," he says. "First I have
to explain to him what two-thirds means. He doesn't understand that." And
while the interpreter uses his fingers to explain the basic principles of
fractions, Pohlen thinks about what else the boy might not understand in
court.

As Pohlen is leaving, Abdiwali says to him: "You are father and brother to
me. Your rule of law is a miracle on earth. All the expense, and two lawyers
fighting just for me, and I don't have to pay any money at all! I have
rights -- I didn't know that. I am grateful that I have the chance to learn
this. It all seems like a fairy tale to me."

And then he says to the interpreter: "But one thing is still a mystery to
me: What do they get out of it?"

No Welfare State in Somalia 

It's obvious that it isn't just about noble legal principles when a German
public prosecutor's office prosecutes 10 starving men from Africa, Pohlen
says on the drive back. With more than 30,000 ships passing through the Gulf
of Aden every year, the pirates have tapped into a vein that is vital to the
industrialized world. "This is about rich against poor, and about securing
trade routes, which Horst Köhler talked about when he was still president,"
says Pohlen, referring to controversial comments by Köhler that were heavily
criticized in Germany, leading the then-president to resign.

On the first day of the trial, in November, protesters in front of the court
building had held up sheets with slogans like "Neo-colonial exploitation of
Africa" written on them. Inside, defense attorneys speaking to the
international press made a statement about the suffering of the Somali
people. The 10 defendants were dressed too lightly for the cold, and they
seemed intimidated. Some had explained that they were fishermen, few of them
could read and write, and some have wives and children who are now even
poorer than before. There is no such thing as welfare in Somalia.

Though not a fan of making political statements in court, Pohlen does quote
a saying: "If you do not share your wealth with the poor, they will share
their poverty with you." The poor on the Somali coast see piracy as
compensation for past injustices. For years, foreign fleets depleted their
fishing grounds, while others dumped their toxic wastes in their waters.
Eventually the fishermen hit upon the idea of getting something back.

What began as a politically motivated David-versus-Goliath campaign has
grown into a criminal industry that supports entire villages. There is said
to be a stock exchange of sorts in the Somali town of Haradheere, a
notorious pirate stronghold, for investors in piracy. Millions in ransom
money are sent to Nairobi and Dubai, where the pirates' backers are. "The 10
men who are on trial here are poor suckers," says Pohlen.

The international community could take on the job of cleaning up the Somali
coastal fishing grounds and providing legal sources of income for Somali
youth. Ideally, the Somalis should be given assistance in establishing law
and order in their own country, and training should be provided for judges,
defense attorneys and prison wardens. But, at the moment, this is nothing
but a wish list. 

Pirate Apologizes to Ship Captain

One of the witnesses, Taipan captain Dierk Eggers, said as much in his
testimony. Piracy, according to Eggers, is a form of violence that has to do
with politics -- or, rather, as he puts it, "with the absence of politics." 

The video that the Dutch made of the liberation of the Taipan is shown, and
Eggers is asked to comment. He is an older man with his white hair combed
back from a weather-beaten face. He has been sailing the world's oceans for
the last 30 years. This was not his first encounter with pirates.

The crew was not afraid, says Eggers, even though the bullets had punctured
the steel bulkheads like butter. They felt secure in the ship's hidden safe
room, and they were pretty sure that the Dutch would come and rescue them.
"But we were also very lucky."

The video shows thin men in shorts and flip-flops coming out of their hiding
places with their hands up. They hadn't tried to resist. One man had hidden
in the bathroom, while several were in the dining room. They must have been
starving. Eggers had had two pounds of butter in storage. After the rescue,
all that was left was the paper.

Abdiwali was very impressed by the captain's testimony. He felt that the old
man was very nice, and he hadn't said anything bad about the pirates. When
Eggers was finished with his testimony, Abdiwali asked to be allowed to
speak. "I am sorry that I was involved in the attack," he said. "I want to
personally apologize for the attack on Captain Eggers' ship."

Eggers accepted the apology, appearing moved.

Motivated by Hunger 

In the next hearing, Abdiwali explained to the court how he became a pirate.
His parents died when he was four, he said, and he grew up with his older
brothers. Two sisters died in a grenade attack. He attended a Koran school
for two months, but then the money ran out. He taught himself to read and
write. The family lived in a hut with a corrugated metal roof and slept on
pieces of cardboard. Sometimes they had nothing to eat for days at a time.

Abdiwali said that he had to begin fending for himself at the age of 10. At
13, he worked as a night watchman in the harbor, where he was paid $1. He
learned to drive a fishing boat. They would spend weeks at sea, and when
they returned his wages were barely enough to survive for the next week. One
day a man offered him $500 for a better job. 

It wasn't until he was on board the dhow that they told him that a ship was
to be hijacked. Abdiwali said that he felt queasy when the weapons were
loaded onto the ship, but that they told him that the arms were only there
so that they could scare the crew. He insisted that he didn't touch any of
the weapons, and that he only helped the man driving the skiff. Hunger and
poverty, he said, had motivated him to commit this crime, and he never asked
himself whether he wanted to be part of it -- it had all seemed self-evident
to him.

Abdiwali felt relieved after making his statement.

'I Haven't Eaten in Days' 

A few days later, the court rejected his defense attorneys' petition to
release him from custody. Pohlen had argued that his client had acted out of
necessity, and that he had only been an accessory to the crime. In light of
his past and his age, Pohlen told the court, Abdiwali had lacked the
maturity and sense of responsibility to understand his actions. Besides,
Pohlen said, even though the attack was dangerous, it had only resulted in
property damage.

The public prosecutor argued that acting from personal necessity did not
offset the extent of Abdiwali's culpability. The educational purpose of
youth custody could certainly be qualified, he added, but the penalty could,
as an exception, be based on the idea of atonement.

"Someone who has to rely on his own devices at an early age can also mature
earlier than usual," said the presiding judge. Besides, he added, it was
also known in Somalia that robbery and extortion are crimes. A serious youth
custody verdict could be expected, said the judge. And then the unfamiliar
words rained down on Abdiwali from the judges' table: extent of guilt,
felony, quasi-military, highly dangerous actions, risk of flight.

Abdiwali has heard enough. He takes off the headphones, buries his face in
his arms and starts to cry. After a while he says, through the interpreter:
"I have lost hope. I haven't eaten in days." The words "hunger strike" are
mentioned.

He tells his attorneys that he doesn't want to live anymore. He says that he
met someone in pretrial detention who was released even though he had
stabbed someone else. "I haven't done anything to anyone, and I apologized.
But they're keeping me in. I think your justice system has weaknesses. It is
not fair."

"Oh, come on!" says Pohlen in his paternal fashion. "You're not entirely
innocent, you know. And if the al-Shabab militias had caught you, you
wouldn't have your head anymore!"

A Slave under the Somali System 

Reports of new pirate attacks have been appearing weekly during the course
of the trial. In the past, hostages were usually freed, but now several have
been killed, both on a German freighter and an American sailing yacht.

This is not good for the mood in the courtroom. Now you can see what happens
when no help arrives, the public prosecutor said. Abdiwali and the others
immediately began to fear that the Germans could decide to take horrible
revenge on them. When the presiding judge learned of their fears, he turned
to the defendants and said: "You are not under any danger to life and limb.
This sort of thing doesn't happen in the German legal system."

It was a good day for Abdiwali. "Now I know that Dr. Steinmetz has no bad
intentions," he says. 

There has also been a promising development. Pohlen has convinced the court
to allow a pediatric psychiatrist to form an opinion of Abdiwali's ability
to make responsible decisions. In doing so, the psychiatrist is expected to
consider Abdiwali's position within the hierarchy of clans and castes in
Somalia, which still divides people into people of noble birth and outcasts.
No one had mentioned this in court because it hadn't occurred to anyone, not
even Abdiwali, that it could be important.

"I'm from the Tumal," he explains. "As a Tumal, you are like a slave. I
cannot live freely and do as I please. I belong to the Hawiye." The Hawiye
are the dominant clan and his masters, he says, the people he depended on
for work as a fishermen or a security guard. They gave him food, cigarettes
and his daily ration of khat, a drug made with leaves that kept him awake
and dispelled his fears. The man who had hired him to help hijack the ship
was a Hawiye. "A Hawiye would not use the same dish that I had eaten from
because I am unclean, like a dog. A Hawiye would not shake my hand."

Abdiwali has noticed that, in Germany, everyone shakes his hand.

'I Want to Go to School and Learn' 

Abdiwali reasons that the Germans are not like the people in Somalia because
they are educated. "Education is everything! When I get out of here, I want
to go to school and learn. Maybe one day I can work as a teacher and help
rebuild my country." The government, Pohlen had said, is even going to give
him an apartment and enough to eat.

"I can't believe any of this is happening," says Abdiwali. "I feel as if I
were waking up from a dream. I don't know: Is it true, is it not true?" He
has a television set in his cell, and the news show "Hamburg Journal" is his
favorite program. It shows him how people live outside the prison, how they
go to shops, museums, hospitals, kindergartens and universities. He is
learning German by watching television.

When asked what he had for lunch today, Abdiwali replies, in German:
"Potatoes and gravy." He can also say: "Hello. Thank you. How are you? What
is your name? I love Germany."

There could be another life for him out there in the city they show on
television. "Who knows? Maybe it was good luck that they caught me and
brought me here," he says. 

"Not yet," he adds, "but maybe soon."

Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan





URL:


*       http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,755340,00.html

 



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