Oman Daily Observer

Refugee issue complicate­s Merkel’s bid to form government

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BERLIN: Two weeks after winning elections with a reduced majority, German Chancellor Angela Merkel took a first step on Sunday toward forming a government by trying to unite her conservati­ve camp which is bitterly divided over refugee policy.

Merkel met for private talks with her Bavarian CSU allies led by Horst Seehofer, who blames her open-door policy that has brought over one million asylum seekers since 2015 for the rise of the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party.

Beleaguere­d Seehofer — who after a vote drubbing faces internal challenger­s, and state elections next year — has revived his calls to cap the national refugee intake at 200,000 a year, a demand Merkel has consistent­ly rejected as unconstitu­tional.

In an opening salvo on Sunday, the CSU published a 10-point list of demands, including a refugee “upper limit”, a broad return to the conservati­ve roots of the centre-right alliance, and a commitment to “healthy patriotism”.

“We must fight the AfD head-on — and fight to get their voters back,” said the text published in mass-circulatio­n Bild am Sonntag, which suggested that “conservati­sm is sexy again”.

The talks were expected to last deep into the night, with Bavarian interior minister Joachim Herrmann conceding the situation was “not easy”, and a party colleague asking journalist­s whether they had “brought their sleeping bags”.

Merkel’s CDU too is nervous ahead of a Lower Saxony state poll next Sunday, where it is running neck- and-neck with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) — a party badly in need of a win after their bruising defeat in September 24 elections.

SPD leader Martin Schulz, gleefully watching the family squabbles in Merkel’s conservati­ve camp, charged that the “madhouse” CDU-CSU dispute showed that “in reality, they are enemy parties”.

The emergence of the antiimmigr­ation AfD, which scored 12.6 per cent, has stunned Germany by breaking a long-standing taboo on hard-right parties sitting in the Bundestag.

Its success came at the expense of the mainstream parties, making it harder for Merkel to form a working majority.

Her best shot now — if she wants to avoid fresh elections that could further boost the AfD — is an alliance with two other parties that make for odd bedfellows, the pro-business Free Democrats (FDP) and the left-leaning Greens.

Such a power pact — dubbed a “Jamaica coalition” because the three party colours match those of the Caribbean nation’s flag — would be a first at the national level in Germany.

In the talks to come, likely to take weeks, all players will fight for ministeria­l posts and issues from EU relations to climate policy. All must give a little to reach a compromise — but not too much, to avoid charges from their own party bases that they are selling out in a grab for power.

 ?? — AFP ?? Secretary General of the Christian Social Union Andreas Scheuer speaks to demonstrat­ors asking for referendum rule as he arrives at the CDU headquarte­rs for a round of talks in Berlin on Sunday.
— AFP Secretary General of the Christian Social Union Andreas Scheuer speaks to demonstrat­ors asking for referendum rule as he arrives at the CDU headquarte­rs for a round of talks in Berlin on Sunday.

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