The Borneo Post

Merkel faces hot summer over refugee stance after attacks

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BERLIN: A rash of attacks in Germany has emboldened political rivals of Chancellor Angela Merkel, blaming her liberal asylum policy for exposing the country to a shocking week of bloodshed.

Four brutal assaults in Germany’s south, three of which were carried out by asylum seekers, have rattled Germans and revived a backlash against Merkel’s decision last year to open the borders to those fleeing war and persecutio­n.

“It all appeared to be going pretty well for Merkel but the situation has changed dramatical­ly in the 10 days between the Nice attack and Sunday’s suicide bomber in Ansbach,” the daily Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung wrote, referring to attacks in France and Germany claimed by the Islamic State ( IS) group.

“The chancellor must once again fear that she will be punished by the voters,” with two pivotal state polls looming in September.

Merkel’s aides were quick to point out that three of the four assailants arrived in Germany before the record influx that brought in more than one million refugees and migrants last year.

The fourth, a teenager who went on a shooting rampage in Munich on Friday killing nine before turning the gun on himself, was born and raised in Germany, the son of Iranian asylum seekers who arrived in the 1990s.

Investigat­ors say he was obsessed with mass killings, including Norwegian rightwing fanatic Anders Behring Breivik’s 2011 massacre, and have ruled out an Islamist motive.

The violence reignited political friction that had eased as the number of new arrivals to Germany slowed to a trickle in recent months due to the closure of the Balkans migration route and an EU deal with Turkey to take back migrants.

“What we always warned of has now happened,” Frauke Petry, head of the rightwing populist AfD party, said in a statement.

Horst Seehofer, conservati­ve premier of Bavaria state in which

It all appeared to be going pretty well for Merkel but the situation has changed dramatical­ly in the 10 days between the Nice attack and Sunday’s suicide bomber in Ansbach.

three of the attacks took place, called into question the principle that asylum seekers should never be sent back to war zones. He later backtracke­d, citing internatio­nal law.

However, he insisted: “We must seriously consider how such people should be treated if they violate the law or can be considered a danger.”

Seehofer leads the Christian Social Union, the sister party to Merkel’s conservati­ve Christian Democrats, and has long been a vocal critic of the refugee influx for which Bavaria was the primary gateway.

He ordered tightened security at airports and railway stations following the suicide bombing near a music festival in Ansbach that wounded 15 people, and an axe attack that injured four passengers on a train in the city of Wuerzburg and a passer-by.

But while Thomas de Maiziere, Merkel’s federal interior minister, pledged to boost spot checks in border regions, Berlin made a point of resisting calls for a raft of new security laws.

“I will propose appropriat­e amendments when I think them necessary,” he told reporters, while warning against blanket suspicion of refugees.

Also on Tuesday, Germany’s neighbour Poland called for more informatio­n about the series of attacks.

“The Polish state is obliged to ask for explanatio­ns about what has happened, for honest informatio­n, because all that is going on the other side of the border,” said Poland’s right-wing Prime Minister Beata Szydlo.

Merkel, who has led Europe’s economic powerhouse for nearly 11 years, sought to project calm by remaining at her holiday cottage north of Berlin this week.

But she has since called a news conference on Thursday “on current domestic and foreign policy issues” in an apparent acknowledg­ement that her absence was causing anxiety.

The country’s top- selling newspaper, Bild, which has generally backed Merkel’s stance on refugees, praised her coolheaded approach.

Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung newspaper

 ?? — AFP photo ?? File photo shows Merkel giving a press conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, one day after the attack at the shopping centre in Munich, southern Germany.
— AFP photo File photo shows Merkel giving a press conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, one day after the attack at the shopping centre in Munich, southern Germany.

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