Posts Tagged ‘Bavaria’

Western state attracts most foreign investors

Sunday, July 15th, 2012

About 25 percent of international investors would tip Bavaria as a particularly attractive state, followed by neighbour Baden-Württemberg with ten percent, the study by consultancy firm Ernst & Young shows.

The more gritty western industrial state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) is only tipped as an attractive region for investment by six percent of those asked.

Yet the figures show a different story, with by far the most foreign investment projects starting up in NRW, Sunday’s Die Welt newspaper reported.

Last year 155 foreign investment projects started up in NRW, more than three times the number in Bavaria.

“NRW is a strong economic location with good infrastructure and a big workforce potential,” study author Peter Englisch told the paper.

With 4,550 jobs created due to foreign investment in 2011, NRW was streets ahead of other states, with Berlin following with 1,975, Baden-Württemberg in third place with 1,817 and Bavaria in sixth place with 1,548.

NRW cities Düsseldorf and Cologne were among the top five top German spots for foreign investments. Düsseldorf leads with 52 projects last year, followed by Frankfurt with 48 and Berlin with 38. Bavaria’s Munich is ranked fourth with 31 projects.

The study also shows that Chinese firms are particularly keen to invest in NRW, while the Swiss tend to opt for Baden-Württemberg which is just next-door. British investors head for Berlin, even though, Englisch said, “Business orientation is missing there, as is support for investors.”

Tellingly, the vast majority of companies investing in the capital city were novices in Germany – of those already active in the country, just two percent said they could imagine setting up a business or subsidiary there.

The strongest industries were auto making and machine building, as well as information technology. Investors come to Germany intending to get a foothold in the market to increase turnover, the papers said, although the country is also highly-regarded as a place to conduct research.

Most of last year’s foreign investors came from the US, although there was an increase from Switzerland, fleeing the strong franc, said Englisch. Chinese investments were also on the increase.

Overall, foreign investment in Germany is rising, with the number of projects up by seven percent in 2011 over the previous year.

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WAGNER. ADOLF

Friday, May 11th, 2012

(1890-1944). NSDAP member from 1923. Nazi party provincial chief of Munich and Upper Bavaria. Bavarian interior minister after 1933.

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German state to republish ‘Mein Kampf’

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

The German state which owns the rights to Adolf Hitler’s manifesto “Mein Kampf” said Tuesday it would release an annotated version 70 years after the Nazi dictator’s suicide.

 

 

After winning a court battle last month against a British publisher who planned to publish parts of the anti-Semitic book alongside commentary from historians, Bavaria said it would put out its own edition by 2015.

State Finance Minister Markus Soeder told German news agency DPA the decision was taken after round-table talks with advocates and opponents of the move, and said it was aimed at “demystifying” the pages drenched in hatred and paranoid fantasy.

 
פרסום הספר בגרמניה אסור, אך פקיעת זכויות היוצרים תשנה זאת (צילום: AP)

Hitler’s ‘Meim Kampf (Photo: AP)

 

“We want to make clear what nonsense is in there, however with catastrophic consequences,” Soeder said of the book on which much of the Nazis’ genocidal policies were based.

 

He said the state aimed with the release to already make future publication as “commercially unattractive” as possible.

 

In addition to the annotated book, the state also plans to put out an edition for schools that encourages a critical approach to the work.

 

Holocaust survivors and their families have expressed fears that neo-Nazis could seize upon the book as propaganda.

 

A court in the state capital Munich ruled in March that British publisher Peter McGee would violate Bavaria’s copyright on the work if he went ahead with plans to sell excerpts with explanations and commentary on German newsstands. McGee has vowed to appeal the decision.

Hitler wrote “Mein Kampf” (“My Struggle”), in 1924 while languishing in a Bavarian prison, and combined elements of autobiography with his views on Aryan “racial purity”, his hatred of Jews and his opposition to communism.

 

Millions of copies were distributed before his death in 1945.

 

It is not banned as such in Germany but since the end of World War II, Bavaria — which holds the rights until the end of 2015 — has not permitted reprints.

 

From 2016, third parties will be able to release copies of the work without obtaining permission from the state “unless it is used to incite racial hatred,” Soeder said.

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German publisher backs down on publishing Hitler extracts

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Munich – A history-magazine publisher who planned to publish extracts from Adolf Hitler‘s Mein Kampf in Germany this week backed down Wednesday in the face of government pressure.

Germany has banned publication of Mein Kampf, a key Nazi tract, since 1945.

Peter McGee said the extracts would be greyed out, and only an accompanying criticism of Hitler’s words would be legible when the weekly magazine Zeitungszeugen goes on sale Thursday.

The German-language magazine, which describes historic events along with cuttings from contemporary newspapers, aimed to ridicule Hitler’s anti-Semitic diatribe, which claimed Jews were to blame for Germany’s ills. Parts of Mein Kampf were to appear.

McGee said banning Mein Kampf had led to a ‘bizarre’ mystification among younger Germans of Hitler’s ‘revolting’ text.

He said he could not afford a legal battle with the state of Bavaria, which had announced it would seek a court injunction to stop the upcoming three issues of the magazine on grounds of a breach of Hitler’s copyright.

McGee said the Hitler text would be covered with a grey haze making it illegible in the issue to go on sale this week.

He told dpa he wanted to ensure that the row over the extracts did not imperil the magazine itself.

McGee said the magazine’s image had suffered from a previous dispute with Bavaria when it re-published pages from a Nazi newspaper of the 1930s. McGee’s company Albertas Ltd won a later court battle over that, because the newspaper was out of copyright.

Writings by Hitler remain in copyright in Germany until 2015, 70 years after the dictator’s suicide.

Charlotte Knobloch, a former national leader of German Jews, attacked the magazine this week, saying the ‘profit motive’ was behind the bid to re-publish Hitler’s words.

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Publisher to challenge German ban on Hitler’s Mein Kampf

Monday, January 16th, 2012

Berlin – The publisher of a history magazine confirmed Monday plans to publish extracts from Mein Kampf, the anti-Semitic hate tract by Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler, this month in a challenge against a 67-year-old ban in Germany.

Sales of Mein Kampf, along with public displays of the swastika, or using Nazi slogans or salutes, have been illegal in Germany since World War II.

The government of Bavaria seized the copyright over all Hitler’s and the Nazi Party‘s writings and it forbids their republication, arguing that this might turn people into neo-Nazis.

Alexander Luckow, an editor and spokesman for British publisher Peter McGee, said sections of Mein Kampf would appear as attachments to three issues of Zeitungszeugen, a periodical that reproduces historic newspapers, starting January 26.

Each section would appear in a 15-page booklet with Hitler’s text on the right page and an academic commentary on the opposite left page criticising Hitler’s fallacies.

‘A lot of his language is really revolting,’ said Luckow, who added that the complete Mein Kampf would not be published, only extended quotations from it.

Bavaria said Monday it would review legal options to stop the magazine.

German law allows free quotations from copyright works, but only in brief form. Luckow said Zeitungszeugen would rely on this exemption.

‘Nobody could claim our project is to spread rightist ideology,’ he said.

Mein Kampf, which was largely written by Hitler in jail in the 1920s, is already in the public domain in some other countries.

Luckow said there would be a print run of 100,000 of each issue.

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