Is this fun or are humiliating orders? ". The German newspaper 'Bild Zeitung' asked this question in a banner headline in Wednesday's edition, under the photos that illustrate the calamities of the cadets onboard the ship of the German Navy, the Gorch Fock, embroiled in a controversy after the mysterious death of two women aged 18 to 25 years, cases in which suspects may have also sexual harassment.
The photos show rituals as the 'baptism' of the novices, immersed in lifeboats full of leftovers and vomiting, or the path of travel cadets penitents kneeling on the deck to reach an officer dressed female with a blonde wig that has to worship and kiss the feet.
The shots were taken in autumn 2010, during the so-called 'mating ceremony ", a holiday celebrated when the ship crosses the Ecuador and who undergo this kind of hazing that go beyond the cadets for the first time.
She told 'Bild Zeitung' witnesses, "participation in the ceremony is completely voluntary, but there is a sinister pressure, because those who refuse to participate is as if they were outside the group." They also confirm that the party involved the commander of the ship, and Captain Norbert Schatz removed.

photos 'Bild Zeitung' point out the exercises on the masts without adequate security and there are images of a party cadets in the dining room, with beer and including wigs, held only a day after the funeral for one of his companions dead.
'Bild Zeitung' published these pictures two days before it reaches the boat, anchored in the Argentine port of Ushuaia, the research team of seven people, consisting of marine and lawyers, which will be presented to Captain Michael Bruhns, which should facilitate the investigation and has been put in charge after the withering dismissal of Schatz.
The primary objective of this research is to ascertain the circumstances surrounding the death of the two cadets. The defending soldiers in the German Parliament, the Hellmut Könighaus Liberal MP said yesterday that before the last death there were no major "incidents on board that would have to report, but confirmed in interviews with cadets allegations were" no mass "action against of some officers.
Via: Elmundo.es
0 comments:
Post a Comment