University of Göttingen: Gerhard Schröder should lay down an honorary doctorate

University of Goettingen
Gerhard Schröder is to lay down an honorary doctorate

Former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (SPD) is increasingly being criticized in Germany. Photo: Kay Nietfeld/dpa

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Now Gerhard Schröder is also being criticized by the university, which once bestowed a special honor on him. The behavior of the former chancellor is incompatible with the values ​​of the university.

The Georg-August University in Göttingen has asked former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder (SPD) to resign his honorary doctorate. The university announced this on Wednesday. Schröder had previously been there for talks.

Against the background of Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, which represents a breach of international law, the foundation university is consistently following the political directive to put all university and research cooperation as well as economic transactions with Russia on hold, as the statement states.

“For the University of Göttingen, it is therefore incomprehensible that with the former Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, an outstanding alumnus and honorary doctor of our university, even after weeks of bitter acts of war and an ever worsening humanitarian catastrophe in Ukraine, does not clearly name the criminal war of aggression as such and his activities in Russian companies can at least rest,” it said.

Holding on to offices in the economic apparatus of the aggressor is incompatible with the university’s mission statement. “Conversations with him, in which he also described his efforts to end the war, could not allay our concerns, even though we welcome every effort to end the illegal war of aggression as soon as possible.”

The natural science faculties awarded Schröder the title in 2005 because during his time as Prime Minister of Lower Saxony (1990-1998) he was extremely committed to promoting natural sciences at the university. In addition, as Federal Chancellor, he provided important impetus for a debate on the life sciences and thus contributed to a critical examination of biotechnology and life sciences. Schröder himself had studied law at the university.

dpa

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