DutchNews.nl, February
7, 2015
The Dutch company which owns
what is said to be the biggest ship in the world has agreed to change its name
because of links to a Nazi war criminal.
The Pieter Schelte, owned by maritime
services groups Allseas, is named after the company’s founder, who joined
Waffen SS during World War II and was later convicted of war crimes.
Allseas
had refused to change the ship’s name, despite a 10-year campaign by Jewish groups,
but has now bowed in to pressure, the Financial Times reported.
The paper says
the change of heart came after British energy secretary Ed Davey said the
naming of the ship was ‘wholly inappropriate and offensive’.
Allseas which is
based in Switzerland, said in a statement: ‘As a result of widespread reactions
which have emerged over the past few days, Edward Heerema, president of Allseas
Group, has announced that the name of the vessel ‘Pieter Schelte’ will be
changed. It has never been the intention to offend anyone. The new name will be
announced within a few days.’
Esther Voet, director of the Dutch Centre for
Information and Documentation on Israel (Cidi) told the FT she was delighted.
‘It was the right thing to do and it is only a pity that it took 10 years for
the owner to see that the name really was not appropriate,’ she said.
Shell,
which is planning to use the ship to decommission North Sea oil platforms, also
welcomed the decision. ‘We have made our feelings clear to Allseas and are
pleased they have decided to change the name of the vessel,’ the Anglo Dutch
oil giant is quoted as saying by the FT.
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