Sunday, February 8, 2009

The Bloodhounds of Berlin




It was a chilly January night in Berlin and a group of soldiers and officers were milling around the back entrance to the Eden Hotel when the first prisoner, Karl Liebknecht, was led out.

He was a small moustached man, in his 40s with receding hair that was black, curly and matted with blood.  One of the soldiers, Otto Runge, lunged forward swinging his rifle as a club.  The butt crashed across the prisoner's head sending him sprawling.

Semi-conscious he was dragged into a car, which then sped off towards Tiergarten Park.  Once there, the vehicle came to a halt and the battered man was ordered out.  Staggering forward he was oblivious to the pistols raised behind his back.  The assassination was over in a matter of seconds.

Twenty minutes after the first prisoner's departure, a second 'criminal', Rosa Luxemburg, stumbled out of the hotel.  This diminutive woman was also in her 40s.  Again Runge rushed forward using his weapon as a club.  This time the victim collapsed – either dead or dying.  She was thrown into the back of another waiting car, which drove around 100 yards when a pistol shot was heard from within its interior...

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