Kuwait Times

Germany’s AfD: Voice of fear, anger over refugee influx

-

The right-wing populist Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) has railed against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s open-door refugee policy, ending a longstandi­ng taboo against extremist parties in the country’s mainstream politics.

Similar to France’s National Front and far-right politician­s in Austria and the Netherland­s, it has captured the protest vote with a xenophobic and anti-Islam platform and now polls around 14 percent nationwide.

After early gains in Germany’s ex-communist east, it has won seats in a series of state elections, most recently in the capital Berlin yesterday, and will now be represente­d on the opposition benches of 10 of the country’s 16 state assemblies.

The AfD was formed more than three years ago by economics professor Bernd Lucke as a euroscepti­c fringe party, railing against expensive bailouts and urging a return to the Deutschmar­k. As the financial crisis abated, the AfD underwent a leadership shift to campaign mainly against an influx of people fleeing war and misery, gathering steam as one million asylum seekers arrived in the EU’s top economy last year.

The party has also captured conservati­ve voters who feel abandoned by Merkel’s increasing­ly centrist Christian Democratic Union, pushing for traditiona­l “family values” and tough law and order policies and denying climate change.

The AfD is strongly nationalis­tic but rejects being labelled an extremist or “Nazi” party, a charge levelled by Social Democratic Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel and others. The party’s leadership feuded recently after one of its regional lawmakers, Wolfgang Gedeon, sparked a storm with antiSemiti­c remarks, including calling Holocaust deniers “dissidents”. ‘Recourse to firearms’

The AfD’s rise breaks with a taboo in post-World War II Germany, where guilt over the Nazi era runs deep and no far-right or extremist party has so far been able to gain a sustained foothold in national politics.

In 2013 elections, the young AfD only narrowly missed the five-percent hurdle to enter national parliament, but the following year sent seven deputies to the European Parliament with 6.5 percent of the vote. In a shock result two weeks ago, the AfD scored more than 20 percent and beat Merkel’s party in the poor, rural and ex-communist state of Mecklenbur­g-Western Pomerania, where the chancellor has her home seat.

Eager to spark media storms and capture headlines, AfD leaders have regularly caused outrage with racist remarks. The party’s most public face, 41-year-old Frauke Petry of the eastern, ex-communist Saxony state, has suggested police should be allowed to shoot at foreigners to stop them at the borders. “No policeman wants to fire on a refugee and I don’t want that either,” she said. “But as a last resort there should be recourse to firearms.”

AfD deputy leader Alexander Gauland said in May about star footballer Jerome Boateng, who was born in Berlin to a German mother and Ghanaian father, that “people find him good as a footballer, but they don’t want to have a Boateng as a neighbor”. And another deputy leader, Beatrix von Storch, also made a jibe at players with immigrant roots after Germany’s 2-0 defeat to France in the Euro 2016 semi-final, tweeting that “maybe next time the German NATIONAL TEAM should play again”. —AFP

 ??  ?? LEH, India: Buddhist devotees gather on Sept 16, 2016 during the Naropa festival, popularly known as the ‘Kumbh Mela of the Himalayas’, a Buddhist gathering that takes place once every twelve years at Hemis village. — AFP
LEH, India: Buddhist devotees gather on Sept 16, 2016 during the Naropa festival, popularly known as the ‘Kumbh Mela of the Himalayas’, a Buddhist gathering that takes place once every twelve years at Hemis village. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait