Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany: Weather system named 'Ahmet' in diversity campaign

Europe's low pressure system Ahmet is the first of 14 wintertime highs and lows named to highlight the continent's diversity.

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Germany's DWD weather service on Tuesday used Ahmet as the official name for a low pressure system over Romania that's headed for Germany and Poland and set to bump into Lisa, another low over Italy, and Alexander, a high over Scotland.

Fourteen sponsored names designated by the Institute for Meteorolog­y at Berlin's Free University await Europe in the coming months, including Bozena and Dimitrios.

As part of a campaign by journalist­s from migrant background­s, names from Arabic, Kurdish, Slavic and other communitie­s will feature on Germany's weather maps in 2021, supplement­ing classic German names such as Günter and Angela.

Naming a sunny high costs sponsors €360 (€442), while the low costs €240 ($295), said the New German Media Makers (NdM), a 1,250-member associatio­n, which also has other names lined up: Chana, Khue and Romani.

"So far, our weather had mostly typical German names only, even though some 26% of people in Germany have migrant roots," declared NdM chair Ferda Ataman, who along with other diversity advocates challenged Interior Minister Horst Seehofer in July to examine police attitudes to racism and racial profiling.

"Making the weather more diverse is only a symbolic step ... What's important is that social diversity finally becomes normal, everywhere," said the Berlinbase­d journalist from Bavaria who has Turkish parents.

'We hijack the weather'

The weather-naming campaign, termed "we hijack the weather," was joined Tuesday by media worker groups in Austria and Switzerlan­d, with the Swiss contingent calling for "anti-racist reporting and more diversity in editorial offices."

On their joint website, they called on media outlets, including newspapers and broadcaste­rs, to commit to a 30% employment quota by 2030 for journalist­s, presenters, actors and other media staff, reflecting so-called "migratory background­s" in each country's demographi­cs.

"Diversity is, of course, more than making migration visible: People with disabiliti­es, different genders, religions, homosexual people and others should be involved and visible everywhere," said the campaigner­s.

Among media profession­als in Germany, they estimated that only between 5-10% of people employed actually had migration background­s.

Some 26% of Germany's 83million population has migratory background­s, according to the federal statistics bureau, Destatis.

Two-thirds of these 21.2 million persons originate from other European nations; half — about 11.1 million — have held German citizenshi­p since birth; and some 29% come from Africa, the Americas and Asia, including Oceania.

In Switzerlan­d, people with migratory background­s make up 38% of the permanent resident population, estimates the Swiss BfS statistics office. About a third of them have Swiss nationalit­y.

'Diversity mania'

Reactions to the campaign came Tuesday, with far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) federal parliament­arian Sebastian Münzenmaie­r posting a Tweet giving the weather low Ahmet a Turkish meme and labeling the NdM campaign "diversity mania."

Berlin's Institute for Meteorolog­y allocates annually sponsored names for between 50 and 60 high pressure weather zones and about 150 low pressure zones.

Mathematic­ally, the 14 names sponsored by diversity campaigner­s would need to be multiplied three-fold to reflect Germany's demographi­cs recorded by Destatis.

 ??  ?? Ahmet is the first of several names in store for German weather maps this year
Ahmet is the first of several names in store for German weather maps this year

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