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<h1><font size=4><b>Baader-Meinhof gang member was secret service
informer</b></font></h1><font size=3>By Tony Paterson in Berlin<br><br>
<i>Thursday, 3 September 2009<br><br>
</i>Verena Becker, the former German Red Army Faction member arrested
last week over her links to a spectacular political murder committed 32
years ago, worked for years as a secret service informant, it emerged
yesterday.<br><br>
Ms Becker, now 57, was paid to help capture leaders of the left-wing
terrorist group, also known as the Baader-Meinhof gang, according to
senior former intelligence figures who spoke in a television documentary
screened last night. The revelations came after she was arrested at her
home in Berlin last Friday when police found new evidence implicating her
in the killing of Siegfried Buback. The chief West German federal
prosecutor was shot dead in 1977 by masked RAF attackers on a motorcycle
while he was driving to work in Karlsruhe.<br><br>
The arrest seemed to provide an answer to a mystery surrounding one of
post-war Germany's most notorious murders, particularly implanted in the
public consciousness since its brutal depiction in last year's film, The
Baader-Meinhof Complex. But yesterday's revelations have further
complicated the story. <br><br>
While Becker was caught and jailed for life in 1977, it was not for the
Buback killing. She was sentenced instead for seriously injuring a
policeman whom she shot shortly before her arrest. Freed on compassionate
grounds in 1989, until last week she had been living under a new name in
Berlin.<br><br>
Michael Buback, the murdered man's son, said yesterday he was convinced
that the authorities had protected Becker. "For my wife, Elizabeth,
and myself it has become a certainty that the perpetrators on the
motorcycle were not punished for their crimes, and that there was a
protective hand shielding one RAF woman terrorist," he said in an
interview with Germany's Die Zeit magazine.<br><br>
In last night's film on the ARD channel, former intelligence officials
said that Becker was a key paid informant for German security services on
the RAF.<br><br>
"Verena Becker turned to us because she found herself in a difficult
personal situation," said Winfried Ridder, a former intelligence
officer. He disclosed how Becker provided the crucial tip-offs that led
to the arrest of RAF leaders Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar, who
were only recently released from prison after serving life terms for the
Buback killing and other murders carried out by the gang.<br><br>
Becker also provided key information on the RAF's structure and
decision-making processes. Mr Ridder said she was paid for her
information. He did not name a sum, but German media reports said
yesterday that she was paid the equivalent of about €50,000. <br>
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</font><h1><b>Former Baader-Meinhof cell member
arrested</b></h1><font size=1>
<a href="http://www.expatica.com/de/news/german-news/Former-Baader_Meinhof-cell-member-arrested-_55822.html" eudora="autourl">
http://www.expatica.com/de/news/german-news/Former-Baader_Meinhof-cell-member-arrested-_55822.html</a>
#<br>
</font><h2><b>Officers seized Verena Becker for complicity in the
shooting of chief federal prosecutor Siegfried Buback on April 7, 1977,
during the bloody era which became known as the "German
Autumn."</b></h2><font size=3>Berlin -- German prosecutors said on
Friday they had arrested a former member of the left-wing extremist
group, the Baader-Meinhof gang, over a murder committed 32 years
ago.<br><br>
Officers from the federal crime bureau seized Verena Becker, 57, on
Thursday for complicity in the shooting of chief federal prosecutor
Siegfried Buback on April 7, 1977, during the bloody era which became
known as the "German Autumn."<br><br>
"Following our investigations until now, there is no suspicion that
the accused fired the deadly shots," prosecutors said, adding
however that she is suspected of "an active role in preparing and
carrying out" the attack.<br><br>
The case was re-opened in April 2008 when investigators used the latest
forensic technology to examine the letter sent claiming responsibility
for the murder.<br><br>
This investigation enabled the authorities to identify Becker's DNA on
the letter, leading them to raid her house last week, where they secured
other incriminating evidence.<br><br>
Becker was already sentenced to life behind bars in December 1977 for
taking part in at least six assassination attempts claimed by the group,
otherwise known as the Red Army Faction, but was pardoned in 1989 and
released.<br><br>
Earlier this week in an interview with mass circulation daily
<i>Bild</i>, Becker denied taking part in the attack on Buback's
chauffeur-driven car.<br><br>
The gang, known as the Baader-Meinhof Gang after its founders Andreas
Baader and Ulrike Meinhof, mounted a violent campaign against what it
considered was the oppressive capitalist state of West Germany from 1977
to 1982.<br><br>
It targeted the German elite and the US military bases in Germany and is
suspected of killing 34 people. The group officially disbanded in
1998.<br><br>
AFP/Expatica<br><br>
<br><br>
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