Merkel asks nation to oppose hate amid immigrant tension
Chemnitz, Germany, Sept. 3: Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday urged Germans to stand up against the far right's message of hate and division, after the eastern city of Chemnitz was rocked by xenophobic protests.
Scenes of far- right protesters chasing down foreignlooking people in violent demonstrations last week against the fatal stabbing of a man, allegedly by an Iraqi, shocked Germany.
Amid the highly charged atmosphere in Chemnitz, a failed asylum applicant was sentenced to eight and a half years in jail for another fatal stabbing — in another case also seized on by the far right’s antiimmigrant campaign.
Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert said it was understandable that such crimes would provoke sadness and concern among the population.
But the marches by “violenceprone right- wing extremists and neo- Nazis have nothing in the least to do with sadness for a person or with concern for a city's cohesion”, he said.
“These people who march and are prone to violence — some have also shamelessly shown their closeness to Nazism — they stand neither for Chemnitz nor for Saxony overall, neither are they ' the people,” said Seibert, referring to a popular “We are the people” chant used by far- right protesters.
“We must make that clear to them,” be it through political or legal means, he said.
“Every citizen can also raise his or her voice to clearly show them their attitude against hate, against the attempt to divide this country.”
But the criticism of the right- wing extremist protesters was immediately rejected by far- right party AfD.
“An entire state and its people are vilified here in general because there is a distinct and understandable resentment about the circumstances,” Joerg Meuthen, AfD co- chief said at a street festival in Bavaria.
After a weekend of rival protests in Chemnitz that saw far- right demonstrators vastly outnumber counter- protesters by 8,000 to 3,000, calls have grown for the silent majority to mobilise. On Sunday, foreign minister Heiko Maas urged Germans to “get off our sofas and open our mouths” against xenophobia. Later Monday, several left- leaning and anti- fascist punk bands, are due to perform in a free concert under the motto "there are more of us”, with several thousands expected to join in the protest against racist violence. A “window demo” call has also gone out on social media for those who cannot make it to Chemnitz to hang a colourful poster on the window.
Every citizen can raise voice to clearly show them their attitude against hate and against attempt to divide this country — Angela Merkel, German Chancellor