2015年2月7日 星期六

Pieter Schelte Heerema 1908-81,Pieter Schelte 號

納粹戰犯 Pieter Schelte Heerema,成功的海事服務公司 Heerema
  1. The former Nazi soldier later founded a successful oil services firm in the Netherlands called Heerema.

Pieter Schelte Heerema - Wikipedianl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pieter_Schelte_HeeremaTranslate this pagePieter Schelte Heerema (Amsterdam, 27 april 1908 – Leiden, 30 september 1981) was een Nederlands lid van de Waffen-SS, officier binnen de Nederlandse .
  1. Pieter Schelte - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

  2. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pieter_Schelte
    Allseas¹ has committed to build Pieter Schelte at a cost of US$1.7 billion. In an interview with De Telegraaf" chairman Heerema named a price of €2.4 billion for ...

  3. In the news

    Ship named for Nazi war criminal to be rechristened after Jewish groups protest

    • Pieter Schelte was the father of the founder and president of the ship’s operator
    • Schelte fought with the Waffen SS and served a prison term for war crimes
    pieter schelte ship
     A Dutch-Swiss maritime engineering company will rename the Pieter Schelte, named after the father of Edward Heerema, head of Allseas Group SA. Photograph: Peter Dejong/AP
    After protests by Jewish groups, a Dutch-Swiss maritime engineering company has announced it will change the name of a giant ship that had been christened after a convicted Nazi.
    The Pieter Schelte’s name honored the Dutch father of Edward Heerema, founder and president of the ship’s operator, Allseas Group SA. Pieter Schelte Heerema is considered a pioneer in maritime engineering who helped open oil exploration in the North Sea.But Jewish groups in the Netherlands and Britain had called for change, saying the name was a grim reminder of Schelte Heerema’s second world war role as an officer in the Nazi’s Waffen SS and his subsequent war crimes conviction.
    Allseas Group said that due to the “widespread reactions” Edward Heerema has announced that the name of the vessel will be changed.

    Earlier Friday, the company said it had no plans to change the name. The new name was not immediately announced.“It has never been the intention to offend anyone,” the company said in a statement.
    “Wonderful, wonderful news. You’ve made my day,” Esther Voet of Dutch Jewish group CIDI said when she was told of the name change.
    The 382-meter (1,253-ft) ship is to be used in the dismantling of Royal Dutch Shell’s Brent Delta platform. The top of the platform will be removed from the North Sea and hauled to shore.
    The ship’s name had been known for years but had drawn increased protests since the ship arrived in Rotterdam last month.
    Shell, which had lobbied for the name to be changed, said in a statement it was “pleased they have decided to change the name of the vessel” and looked forward to working with Allseas.
    Schelte Heerema fought with the Waffen SS and later become a director of a company in the Netherlands that rounded up laborers – some volunteers, others conscripted – for the Nazi war effort, said David Barnouw, a retired researcher at the respected Dutch National Institute for War Documentation. He served one year and two months in prison for war crimes, he said.
  4. Pieter Schelte Heerema is considered a pioneer in maritime engineering who helped open ...




  5. 'Bloodstain on Shell’s name’: Oil giant to use ship named after Nazi war criminal

    Published time: February 06, 2015 17:29
    Edited time: February 06, 2015 19:51
    Photo from wikipedia.org
    Photo from wikipedia.org
    Royal Dutch Shell’s decision to plough ahead with plans to host a ship named after a Nazi war criminal in UK waters has provoked outrage and despair among Jewish communities and Holocaust memorial groups.
    The vessel is named after Pieter Schelte Heerema, a notorious Nazi war criminal who was a member of the Waffen-SS during WWII. As part of his military role, Heerema delivered slave labor to the eastern front throughout the conflict.
    Having failed in its efforts to get the vessel’s owner to change the name of the ship, Shell is set to launch the boat in UK waters in coming weeks.
    The move forms part of the energy giant’s broader agenda of decommissioning an oilfield off the coast of Scotland. As part of this process, Shell has tendered plans to the British government to use the“Peter Schelte” vessel to remove the Brent Delta oil platform from the East Shetland basin.
    The oil rig, which consists of a 23,500 ton steel framework, will then be dispatched for scrapping.
    The “Peter Schelte” ship is currently docked in Rotterdam, where its construction is almost complete. Edward Heerema, the son of Pieter Schelte Heerema, named it in memory of his father.
    The vessel’s planned presence in British waters has sparked anger and despair among Jewish groups throughout Europe.
    Vivian Wineman, chief of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, said he will challenge Shell’s plan to introduce the ship to North Sea waters.
    “We call on Shell and the government to insist the ship is renamed,” he told the Financial Times.
    “The ship-owner should be sensitive to the citizens of Britain and the Netherlands, both Jewish and non-Jewish, who will be deeply hurt.”
    “There is never a good time to name a ship after a dead Nazi, but coming just as we commemorate the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, and considering the majority of Dutch Jews were killed in the Holocaust, this is very unfortunate timing.”
    Pieter Schelte Heerema. (Photo from wikipedia.org)
    Pieter Schelte Heerema. (Photo from wikipedia.org)

    Shell said it had backed a campaign, spearheaded by the Dutch, to have the name of the ship altered. Its owner, the chief of Swiss-based energy firm Allseas, however, refused the demand.
    “Shell believes that the name of the vessel is inappropriate. We have raised our concerns with Allseas and asked them to consider changing the name,” the firm told the FT.
    “However, the name of the vessel is a matter for Allseas alone, and one for Allseas to justify,” it added.
    The issue has reportedly been considered by Shell’s top management. But the crane ship is the only one in the world capable of lifting the energy firm’s mammoth Brent oil platform.
    The Brent oil field, at the center of the controversy, has yielded 2 billion barrels of oil and almost 6 trillion cubic feet of gas since production began in 1976.
    Esther Voet, chief of the Dutch Centre for Information and Documentation on Israel (Cidi), which fronted the ship’s renaming campaign, denounced Shell for deciding to use the vessel.
    “This is a bloodstain on the name of Royal Dutch Shell,” she told the FT.
    The British government told the newspaper the issue of the ship’s name was “a matter for Allseas and Shell to resolve.”
    Pieter Schelte Heerema lived in Venezuela prior to the war, and made his way back join the Nazis after Germany invaded the Netherlands.
    After his conviction, he managed to convince a judge he had severed ties with the Nazis and worked for the Resistance. Although Heerema’s testimony has now been discredited, the judge believed his story and halved his sentence.
    The former Nazi soldier later founded a successful oil services firm in the Netherlands called Heerema.

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