The Phnom Penh Post

German politician panned over Candy Crush game confession

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A GERMAN regional leader has sparked a backlash after he admitted on a chat app to playing Candy Crush on his phone during online pandemic response meetings with Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Bodo Ramelow, head of the eastern Thuringia state, made the confession during what he thought was a closed meeting on the invitation­only audio chatroom app Clubhouse at the weekend.

The politician from the hard-left Die Linke party said that during the often hours-long sessions, “some people play Sudoku, others play chess or Scrabble on their phones, and I play Candy Crush”, according to German media reports.

He also reportedly referred to the chancellor as “Merkelchen”, a diminutive meaning “little Merkel”.

Responding to criticism online and in the media, Ramelow apologised for the Merkel slur and reflected on Twitter that “diminishin­g the chancellor’s name was an act of male ignorance”.

At a press conference in Berlin on January 25, Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert quipped that the revelation “speaks for itself and requires no further comment”.

Armin Laschet, the head of Merkel’s conservati­ve CDU party, said he did not play games in the pandemic conference­s “because they are about very, very important questions.

“We are discussing fundamenta­l encroachme­nts on basic rights. in schools, in education, in the economy, and you have to be involved in a focused way,” he told reporters in Berlin on January 25.

Thuringia’s interior minister, Georg Maier of the Social Democrats, told the RND broadcaste­r that Ramelow “should reconsider his behaviour”.

Ramelow and other state premiers pushed back hard against Merkel’s proposals for a tougher lockdown at a decisive pandemic meeting in October – weeks before an explosion in new coronaviru­s cases.

Ramelow has since expressed regret and admitted that the chancellor was right to push for tougher measures.

 ?? AFP ?? State premier Bodo Ramelow of the far left Die Linke party uses his mobile phone to take pictures of photograph­ers at the Thuringian State Parliament in Erfurt, eastern Germany, prior to the re-running of a vote to elect the Thuringian State Premier.
AFP State premier Bodo Ramelow of the far left Die Linke party uses his mobile phone to take pictures of photograph­ers at the Thuringian State Parliament in Erfurt, eastern Germany, prior to the re-running of a vote to elect the Thuringian State Premier.

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