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Tracking the Emerging Beast Power
Immigrant crime debate intensifies
in Germany
DPA
Berlin - A key ally of Chancellor Angela Merkel has drawn the ire of
immigrant groups with his call for tougher action against youth crime
and the deportation of foreign criminals. Roland Koch, the Christian
Democratic (CDU) premier of Hesse state, has put law and order at the
centre of his campaign for a third term of office in elections on
January 27.
| The assault, caught on surveillance cameras, prompted Koch to declare
"we have too many criminal young foreigners," pointing to statistics
showing half of all violent crime in Germany was committed by people
under the age of 21, and that 50 per cent of those were foreigners. |
The Migrant Welfare Forum, an umbrella organization representing 100
immigrant groups, warned that the debate was rekindling prejudices
against foreigners and threatened to divide society.
"At a time when an open and constructive discussion is needed, as well
as proposals for solutions, you are creating enormous damage with your
election polemics," the group said in a letter to Koch and Merkel.
The chancellor has backed the state premier's call, while her Social
Democratic (SPD) coalition partner accused him of "populism" and said
existing laws were sufficient to deal with the issue.
Koch used a brutal attack by two Greek and Turkish youths on a German
pensioner at a Munich subway station late December to call for tougher
punishment for young delinquents and deportation of non- German
offenders.
The assault, caught on surveillance cameras, prompted Koch to declare
"we have too many criminal young foreigners," pointing to statistics
showing half of all violent crime in Germany was committed by people
under the age of 21, and that 50 per cent of those were foreigners.
Since then there has been a string of highly publicized attacks
involving youths, both German and non-German, fuelling an emotional
debate about crime prevention and deterrence.
Kenan Kolat, the head of the Turkish community in Germany, accused Koch
of "fanning racist sentiments in society," and appealed to voters not to
re-elect him.
CDU Secretary General Roland Pofalla dismissed the criticism, saying the
Turkish community should become more active in the search for solutions
to crime by young foreigners instead of "insulting politicians and
calling for an election boycott."
Earlier, Charlotte Knobloch, president of Germany's national council of
Jews, warned that highlighting the ethnicity of the suspects might play
into the hands of neo-Nazi campaigners.
She said crimes committed by youths with an immigrant background were "a
welcome argument" for the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) to
call into question the right of foreigners to live in Germany.
The party, which accuses foreigners of taking away jobs from Germans,
praised Koch for adopting a stand its leader Udo Voigt said "will lead
to more citizens placing their trust in the policies of the NPD."
The prosperous state of Hesse, where the banking centre Frankfurt is
located, is one of four German states that go to the polls this year,
ahead of national elections due in September 2009.
Lower Saxony votes on the same day as Hesse and the city-state of
Hamburg a month later. All three states are governed by the Christian
Democrats. In Bavaria, ruled by the CDU's sister-party, the Christian
Social Union, polls take place in September.
The CDU is expected to retain power in all three states it governs, but
faces losing its absolute majority in Hesse and Hamburg.
Opinion polls released Friday showed support for the CDU dropping one
percentage point to 39 per cent at national level, while backing for the
SPD was up 2 per cent to 30 per cent.
In Hesse, the CDU saw its popularity slip by 2 per cent, while the SPD
improved its position by 3 per cent, according to the survey conducted
by Infratest dimap.
Analysts linked this to Koch's controversial views and the fact that the
state had a poor record in processing crimes committed by young
offenders as a result of cutting back in the number of police and
judges.
"The government's record in this respect is anything but positive," said
Richard Hilmer, managing director of Infratest dimap.
In Munich, where the CSU is expected to win easily, the party has come
under fire for an election poster it issued in the wake of the subway
attack on the 76-year-old pensioner.
The poster shows one of the assailants kicking a silhouette of the
defenseless victim while he is on the ground. On it are the words "...
so that you are not the next."
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