Susanne Albrecht
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'Susanne Albrecht (born March 1, 1951) is a German former [word "terrorist" omitted] and member of the Red Army Faction.
Born to a wealthy family in Hamburg, Germany, Albrecht attended the University of Hamburg studying sociology and psychology. Becoming acquainted with several members of the Red Army Faction, she was a participant in the murder of her godfather[citation needed] and president of the Dresdner Bank Jürgen Ponto on July 30, 1977. A longtime friend of the family, she was able to gain entry allowing Brigitte Mohnhaupt and Christian Klar into the house. Once inside, Albrecht and her partners intended to kidnap Ponto for ransom, however they killed him when Ponto began resisting.
During the next year, Albrecht stayed at a Palestinian training camp in Yemen before traveling to Mons, Belgium with members Werner Lotze and Rolf Clemens Wagner and failed to assassinate then NATO commander-in-chief General Alexander Haig on June 25, 1979.
In 1980, like many other RAF members, Albrecht left the Federal Republic of Germany via Prague using a false passport under the name Ingrid Jäger. Provided with a false identity by the state security, she settled in Cottbus where she worked in an engineering university as an English translator. She eventually married a scientist and were living in Köthen when, in 1986, she was recognized when West German television reports were broadcast regarding information on the Red Army Faction.
Although quickly resettled in Berlin by public security, with the fall of the Berlin Wall later that year and the reunification of Germany, the German government began issuing arrests for suspected terrorist members. Albrecht soon was found living as a housewife under the name "Becker" when she was finally arrested, the first of eight arrests in a 10-day period, in front of her apartment on June 6, 1990. She was sentenced to 12 years imprisonment by the upper state court in Stuttgart, however she served only half her term when she was paroled in 1996.
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This article is based on a translation of an article from the German Wikipedia.'
Comments here are heavily censored, ironic really ;-)
benjathome 1 year ago
@benjathome yea true, you know why? Hours of work goes into these vids. They are uploaded, then some little fascist high jacks one to spread his/her racist crap about socialism, communism, or muslims etc.
you want democracy? Make your own fukin vids
CommunistNewZealand 1 year ago 4
The fact of some RAF people was put in jail for decades by killing Hanns-Martin Schleyer, a nazi from SS who as never punished and rose a lot in the german society after the war, shows which was the society RAF was fighting against.
Some can say the methods could be wrong, maybe stupid, but the ideal was HIGH.
caravaggio31 1 year ago 5
@caravaggio31 yes, poster WW2 Germany suffered from a severe lack of de-nazification
CommunistNewZealand 1 year ago
@ CommunistNewZealand
The terror of the Nazis in the past was no legitimation to make terror like the RAF against normal police men, persons of a plane (Landshut) or german politic men in a democratical state. If you WANT to have terror you can find always so-called »REASONS« like the persons of Osama bin Ladin or the IRA.
Terrorisme and Nazisme have a lot of parallels: A little group of political fanatical persons with high ideals want to say the society in this direcetion they must go.
RobbyBln38 2 years ago
and how many millions does your sick capitalism terrorize can you answer that?
CommunistNewZealand 2 years ago 3