Scientology
Leipzig, Germany
which will be bestowed today by the "European-American
Citizens Committee for Human Rights and Religious
Freedom in the USA" one day after the official
Charlemagne Award. "By holding this ceremony, we
intended to give a sign that, in spite of the Clinton
administration, there are people in America who think
differently and who do not swim with the Scientology tide,"
said Thomas Gandow, Sect Commissioner of the
Evangelical Church in Berlin-Brandenburg and member of
the citizens committee.
Clinton, who received the official Charlemagne Award in
Aachen yesterday for his merits in humanity and world
peace, was said to have met with celebrity Scientologist
John Travolta in the last few years, and to even have
authored an article in a magazine for the controversial
community. Therefore the Committee regards the U.S.
President as anything but deserving of distinction and now
wants to honor the American Scientology opponent and
investment banker, Robert Minton, with the "Alternative
Charlemagne Award."
Scientology went on the offensive and brought serious
accusations against Minton: a letter to Berlin Bishop
Wolfgang Huber alleged that Minton had been involved in
illegal money-laundering deals, "aided and abetted by a
former military dictatorship and notorious human rights
violators in Nigeria." In this manner, the investment banker
was said to have bought back Nigerian debt at cheap
prices on the world market on commission from Nigeria
and without knowledge of credit bankers, causing damages
in the amount of hundreds of millions.
Thomas Gandow described Scientology's accusations as
false. He said the "Lisa McPherson Trust," of which Minton
is the chairman, helps victims of Scientology make their
claims in court. He also said that Scientology has been
using its accusations for years in a campaign of slander
against Minton. The debt transactions were said to have
taken place, but it served nothing other than the interest of
the Nigerian people. "In no case did Minton profit unduly."
Nevertheless, there is doubt about Minton's credibility.
"Transparency International," an international organization
which fights corruption, confirmed, without naming names,
that criminal actions occurred in connection with Nigerian
debt transfers. These accusations have also caused upset in
the church administration. "We are conducting our own
investigations," said Provost Karl-Heinrich Luetcke. "If it
should turn out that there is anything to these accusations,
then that would be an annoying win on points for
Scientology."
Scientology: Alternative Charlemagne Award for sect opponent
June 3, 2000
Der Tagesspiegel
Jan-Martin Wiarda
The way the initiators picture it, it is more honest than the
famous original: the "Alternative Charlemagne Award"