Turmoil has erupted in Germany over Muslim migrants, and now some Germans are adding to the pandemonium by turning on the asylum seekers. All of this is thanks to Merkel’s irresponsible leadership.
The government, which released the figures in response to a parliamentary question, said in a statement it “strongly condemns” the violence, adding: “People who have fled their home country and seek protection in Germany have the right to expect safe shelter.”
Those words were uttered by Left-wing Die Linke party, Ulla Jelpke, who pretends that the migrant chaos that has seized Germany did not exist. The citizens of every country that has opened its doors to asylum seekers should also have a right to safety.
No attacks on innocent people are justified. At the same time, the neglect of authorities to protect their citizens from the crimes committed by Muslim migrants is appalling, and has created a sense of rage and a climate of justified fear among German citizens.
As reported by Reuters:
Migrants in Germany committed or tried to commit some 69,000 crimes in the first quarter of 2016, according to a police report that could raise unease, especially among anti-immigrant groups, about Chancellor Angela Merkel’s liberal migrant policy.
These crimes include mass sex assaults. Yet despite all the strife and chaos that the Muslim migrants are causing, Ulla Jelpke dismisses all concern about the influx as neo-Nazism, saying that “Nazis are threatening refugees and therefore our democracy.”
Now Germans are expected to pay out 20 billion Euros for migrants in 2016, while the cost to “fix migrant chaos” is expected to approach 47 billion Euros by the end of 2017. By 2020, the amount spent on migrants is expected to balloon to 93.6 billion euros, according to “a draft from the federal finance ministry for negotiations.”
“Nearly 10 attacks on refugees a day in Germany in 2016”, by Harriet Agerholm, Independent, February 27, 2017:
An average of nearly 10 attacks a day were carried out on refugees in Germany last year, according to the country’s interior ministry.
Attacks injured 560 people, including 43 children, and prompted accusations that the country’s hardened stance on the refugee issue was encouraging hate crimes.
According to the ministry, there were more than 3,500 attacks on refugees and asylum hostels
Three quarters of attacks were against individuals outside buildings housing refugees, with 1,000 attacks on the building themselves.
A further 217 refugee organisations and volunteers were targeted, according to the preliminary figures released by the ministry.
Germany has been struggling with a backlog of asylum applications although the number of refugees arriving in the country fell to around 280,000 last year, down around 600,000 on the year before, following the closure of the Balkan migration route.
The authorities have recently toughened its refugee procedures, bringing in strict benefits rules, speeding up the removal of failed asylum seekers and paying refugees to return voluntarily to their own countries.
The government, which released the figures in response to a parliamentary question, said in a statement it “strongly condemns” the violence, adding: “People who have fled their home country and seek protection in Germany have the right to expect safe shelter.”
Chancellor Angela Merkel has faced a backlash for her decision to open the country to people fleeing conflict and persecution, and the issue expected to be central to the federal elections in September.
Opinion in Germany is polarised with the government under fire for not taking action against a reported rise in hate crime.
A politician for Germany’s left-wing Die Linke party, Ulla Jelpke, blamed the violence on far-right extremists and called for the government to take stronger action.
“Do people have to die before the right-wing violence is considered a central domestic security problem and makes it to the top of the national policy agenda?” she told regional news agency Funke Media Group.
She called for the government to “stop giving the impression through new tougher asylum laws that refugees are a threat’.
Ms Jelpke continued: “Nazis are threatening refugees and therefore our democracy.”
A spokesperson for Amnesty International said: “There are structural problems in Germany with how it prevents and deals with hate crimes.
“We need to see better risk assessments, more protection at certain locations and prosecutions of these appalling racist crimes.”…..