Gulf News

‘Attacks have made Europe a more fearful place’

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As Germany was recovering yesterday from an apparent suicide attack at an openair music festival in Ansbach, the world media debated over the weekend the fallout of Friday night’s shooting rampage in Munich.

rest of us, must hold their nerves and not make an already bad situation even worse.”

The New York Times, putting all the recent attacks in Europe in perspectiv­e, cautioned against a backlash against foreigners and appealed for a renewed focus on the refugee crisis. “First came Britain’s decision to leave the European Union. Then the horrific attack in Nice, France, which killed 84 people. Then, on Friday, a shooting near a shopping mall in Munich… These events alone would be cause for a continenta­l nervous breakdown. But still unresolved is an even bigger threat to European stability: a failure to develop a coherent, humane plan to deal with the inexorable flow of desperate people fleeing violence and persecutio­n in the Middle East and Africa and seeking a new home in Europe,” the newspaper said.

The Independen­t drew attention to the fact that the alleged gunman, David Ali Sonboly, was at least nominally a Muslim, and therefore the repercussi­ons of the attack could be subject to a jaundiced view by the society at large. “Like the lone young Afghan lashing out with knives, [the Munich attack] can only feed Islamophob­ia, just as incidents in Nice, Paris, Brussels, Orlando and in Florida will do so. The approachin­g elections in Germany, France and the US, though so different in many ways, will have one theme in common with the British EU referendum: of societies and political systems struggling to come to terms with a disaffecte­d population that feels excluded, ‘left behind’ and ignored by political elites. They represent a receptive audience for demagogic leaders on the make.”

The Asian Age in India echoed similar concerns and called for common sense to prevail in the aftermath of the attack and said: “Western security experts have of late spoken of ‘lone wolf’ attacks without adequate explanatio­n or justificat­ion, in the process creating the scare that the friendly Muslim in the street may be a would-be assassin. A more plausible approach is to suggest that there cannot be ‘lone wolf’ terrorist attacks in this world of psychologi­cal warfare and social media combat in which brainwashi­ng of even unknown individual­s through invidious propaganda is rampant. Terrorist violence perpetrate­d by groups such as Daesh is a serious enough problem, and to count every act of mass murder in that analytical group is to score an own goal.”

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