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Schwarzenegger’s name removed from Stadium
VIENNA (Austria)—Officials in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s hometown quietly
removed his name from a soccer stadium overnight, complying with the
California governor’s demand in a bitter dispute over his death penalty
stance. By early Monday, the large metal letters spelling out the action
star-turned-politician’s name were gone from the 15,300-seat stadium in
the southern city of Graz.
Schwarzenegger had written to the mayor of Graz a week ago asking that
his name be removed after local activists called for the stadium to be
renamed because of Schwarzenegger’s refusal to block the Dec. 13
execution of Stanley Tookie Williams. Capital punishment is illegal in
Schwarzenegger’s native Austria, where many people consider it barbaric.
Opposition had run especially high in Graz, whose official slogan is
“City of Human Rights”.
The governor, turning the tables on his critics, ordered his name
removed and returned a ring of honor that Graz officials gave him in
1999. With the Hollywood star’s name gone, the sign atop the stadium in
Graz, about 120 miles south of Vienna, read simply: “Stadium Graz
Liebenau.” Officials had renamed the arena in Schwarzenegger’s honor in
1997.
Calls to the city hall in Graz went unanswered Monday, a national
holiday in Austria. Last week, Graz Mayor Siegfried Nagl wrote to
Schwarzenegger urging him to reconsider his decision to cut ties to the
city and to keep the ring. Nagl said he reassured Schwarzenegger that he
remains admired by most local residents.
Nagl said he was worried that severing ties to Schwarzenegger, one of
Austria’s most famous sons, potentially could cost the city millions in
tourist revenue. But a movement to scrap Schwarzenegger’s name from the
stadium had gained momentum in recent weeks, and a majority of the city
council in Graz was said to support the idea — even before
Schwarzenegger’s demand.
The ring arrived at Graz’s city hall late last week, and officials were
considering displaying it at a local museum, Nagl told the weekly
newspaper Die Woche. Many Europeans have scorned the United States’ use
of capital punishment in general, and Schwarzenegger’s refusal to grant
clemency in particular. They are now waiting to see how Schwarzenegger
deals with the scheduled Jan. 17 execution of a 75-year-old inmate.
Schwarzenegger was born in 1947 in the village of Thal just outside
Graz, where he began his bodybuilding career. He immigrated to the
United States in 1968 and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 1984, but
has retained his Austrian citizenship.—Agencies |