Amadeu António Kiowa: Victim of Extremist Right-Wing Hatred in Germany
Amadeu António Kiowa, a contract worker from Angola, should have lived to see his child grow up. But his life ended thirty years ago today in Brandenburg, where right-wing extremists killed him.
On October 7th, 1990, four days after Germany's reunification, Andrzej Frątczak became the first victim of right-wing extremists in former East Germany. The 36-year-old Polish citizen was beaten by three German men in front of a club in Lübbenau, a tourist magnet in Brandenburg province. One of the attackers murdered him with a knife. Two of the culprits who killed Andrzej Frątczak were part of a racist attack against an asylum seekers' hostel located just a few steps away from the first crime scene. This aspect shows what kind of environment they came from.
Arrival in 1987
Since the reunification, at least 208 people in Germany were murdered by Nazis or other right-wing extremists. The second victim was Amadeu António Kiowa. His name is well known in Germany, because of his murder, and because a famous foundation, the 'Amadeu Antonio Stiftung' was named after him. Needless to say, the foundation runs projects against right-wing, left-wing and Islamist extremism, racism and antisemitism. It is a very active organization. Just today, its chairlady Anetta Kahane reported a growing number of conspiracy theorists in the Corona crisis, and a shocking coherence between their 'ideas' and antisemitism.
Born in Angola in 1962, Amadeu António Kiowa became a contract worker in the GDR in 1987. His dream was to become an aviation technician, but is new home country wanted him to be a butcher. This is what happened. In 1990, he lived in Eberswalde, another town in Brandenburg, when his girlfriend got pregnant. Kiowa would never see or hold his child.
Attacked in Eberswalde
In those days, the GDR's contract workers from Angola, Vietnam and other countries did not have contracts anymore because communist East Germany had just ceased to exist. It was a challenging time to many.
On November 24th, 1990, thirty years ago today, a Nazi mob from several towns and villages in Brandenburg was in Eberswalde. With some 50 locals, they wanted to beat up foreigners. This was when they saw Amadeu António Kiowa and two friends from Mozambique. The three men were attacked with knives and beaten. While his two friends managed to flee from the scene in spite of their injuries, Kiowa did not.
Disturbing Facts
One of the Nazis jumped up and down on the victim's head. His injuries were so serious that he fell into a coma he never woke up from. Eleven days later, on December 6th, 1990, Amadeu António Kiowa died. When the investigation into his case was completed, disturbing facts became public knowledge.
Not only was a man murdered simply because he was Black, but the murder could have been prevented. As it turned out, twenty police officers were nearby during the attack. The problem was that they did not do anything. Three policemen in civilian clothes who had followed the Nazis did not take any action either. They were later sued, but a court acquitted them.
Problem Persists
The investigators and courts never found out which member of the Nazi mob killed Kiowa. At the end of the trial, some of the attackers were jailed for up to four years. Other culprits got probation. Those verdicts were harshly criticized for being far too harmless considering this was about murder with a racist motivation.
Right-wing extremism was a huge problem in Brandenburg and other eastern German states thirty years ago. This has not changed until today. In last year's state elections, 23.5 percent of Brandenburg's voters, almost one in four, chose the extremist right-wing 'AfD'.
'Racist Climate'
Amadeu António Kiowa's son was born on January 9th, 1991. On the same day, Kiowa's body was transported to Angola. His girlfriend, a German lady, was later verbally attacked by Nazis. Swastika's were drawn on her son's stroller. She moved to Berlin, which is where she died in 2015. She left behind four children, including Amadeu Antonio Kiowa's son, and her husband, a Congolese citizen.
For the Amadeu Antonio Foundation, Anetta Kahane said Amadeu António Kiowa had been killed because he had been Black. The murder had been "the result of a stirred up racist climate, especially in the new federal states", meaning those in former East Germany. She said the Black Lives Matter protests had shown that the world was far away from being racism-free.