David Irving’s Fight against Australian Suppression of Free Speech |
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Documents prised by legal action from the files of Australia’s prime minister and his staffTelex from Australian embassy in Bonn, Germany
March 31, 1994
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David Irving after challenging prime minister John Howard in London on October 23, 1997.
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From: Bonn/ FA ref O. BO2638 (Dept of Immigration)
Date: 31.03.94 @ 9:47 ó by Telex
IN CONFIDENCE
David Irving: Status in GermanyFrom file 801/5/2/1 92/1338
FOR DIEA (ENTRY LIASON, VLS, CANBERRA) AND SCORPION
Further to Reftel, Paras 2-5 on the 1990 Federal Entry ban on David Irving in Germany, the Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz (Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution) forwarded us the following information via liaison (Embassy Translation). In effect it confirms our previous advice that, while Irving did not commit any offence, it was his clear intention to avoid the effect of the Minister’s decision.
TEXT BEGINSIrving was formally expelled from Germany on 9 November 1993. The expulsion order was handed to him in his hotel in Munich. Therefore he knows that he is no longer permitted to enter Germany.
The direction to turn him back at the border, dated 9 March 1990, was not an entry ban directed towards him, but simply an internal instruction to border control authorities. It was not officially communicated to either him or people in his circle. Since he was turned back at the German-Netherlands border at least once, he must have known that the border control authorities had such an instruction. The fact that he did not turn back, but travelled on to the next border crossing and entering at that point, in our opinion leads to the conclusion that he wanted to circumvent the instruction to turn him back.
TEXT ENDS
XC O.B02663 0921 31.03.94
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Note: THE ALLEGATION that Mr Irving was ever “turned back” at the German-Dutch border is completely untrue. The Bundesamt has not replied to his letter of protest, in which he demanded a retraction of this lie. |
© Focal Point 1999
David Irving