REICHSTAG ON FIRE
The Reichstag building in Berlin, the German Parliament House, was on fire on the night of 27th February 1933, like the Godhra train on fire on 27th February 2002.
The German Parliament in Berlin, the Reichstag, was burned on 27.2.1933. This is the most contested and controversial event of Hitler. A day later, Hitler signed the Reichstag Fire Decree, which gave his govt the legal authority to imprison opponents and suspend civil liberties. The Nazis arrested Marinus van der Lubbe, a Dutch Communist, on the charge of setting the fire. He was executed on 10.1.1934, for the arson act. There had been a debate on whether Lubbe burnt or the Nazis set the fire as a false-flag attack. Evidence shows the possibility of a Nazi conspiracy. In June 2019, an affidavit of former investigator Fritz Tobias was discovered. In it, Hans-Martin Lennings, an SA operative, claimed in 1955 that he and his SA group drove Lubbe to the scene of the fire - and that the Reichstag was already on fire. Lennings claimed that his team was made to sign a paper denying knowledge of the event, and that they protested Lubbe's arrest. In 2008, a German court posthumously pardoned Lubbe.
Comments
Post a Comment