Arab News

Germany failing to protect Muslims from hate: Human Rights Watch

German NGO chief says 2023 marked ‘frightenin­gly new high’ for hate incidents in the country

- Arab News

Germany is failing to protect Muslims from growing racism amid a “lack of understand­ing” about the issue, Human Rights Watch has warned.

The country has yet to implement a working definition of anti-Muslim racism and frequently fails to record data on race-hate incidents, the organizati­on said on Tuesday. A key failing of the German government concerns its “lack of understand­ing that Muslims experience racism and not simply faith-based hostility,” said Almaz Teffera, a HRW researcher on racism in Europe.

“Without a clear understand­ing of anti-Muslim hate and discrimina­tion in Germany, and strong data on incidents and community outreach, a response by the German authoritie­s will be ineffectiv­e.”

Germany recorded 610 “antiIslami­c” crimes in 2022, but from the start of 2023 to September that year, the number had climbed to 686.

There are fears that the figure has further surged since the outbreak of the Gaza conflict last October. Germany’s Interior Ministry told HRW that it could not provide data on anti-Muslim crimes from October 2023 to the year-end. However, civil society groups in the country recorded a spike in reported incidents, leading Germany’s federal commission­er for antiracism, Reem Alabali-Radovan, to join an EU-wide expression of concern about the rise in hate.

The Alliance Against Islamophob­ia and Anti-Muslim Hate, a German NGO network, documented “an average of three anti-Muslim incidents a day” last November.

The network’s chief, Rima Hanano, told HRW that “2023 marked a frightenin­gly new high for anti-Muslim incidents.”

Though the network collects its own internal data on the frequency of hate incidents, the German government “has yet to develop an infrastruc­ture for countrywid­e monitoring and data collection,” HRW said.

The government has also classified hate incidents against Muslims as “anti-Islamic” since 2017, removing nuances surroundin­g the ethnic identities of victims, HRW added.

A three-year study commission­ed by the government and published last year recommende­d that authoritie­s “no longer dissociate anti-Muslim hate from racism,” but instead “recognize their connection.”

However, the Interior Ministry has failed to carry out the report’s recommenda­tions, HRW said, adding: “Any focus on anti-Muslim hate and discrimina­tion that fails to include racism or acknowledg­e the intersecti­onal nature of such hostility will be unable to capture the full picture or inform effective policy responses.”

Muslim communitie­s in Germany are a “group with a diversity of ethnicitie­s” rather than a “monolithic religious group,” said Teffera.

“Germany should invest in protecting Muslims and all other minority communitie­s in Germany because it is an investment in protecting all of German society.”

 ?? AP ?? Demonstrat­ors mark the anniversar­y of a far-right extremist attack on Feb. 19,
2020 in Hanau, Germany, that killed nine persons of predominan­tly Muslim background, in this file photo taken on Feb. 17, 2024.
AP Demonstrat­ors mark the anniversar­y of a far-right extremist attack on Feb. 19, 2020 in Hanau, Germany, that killed nine persons of predominan­tly Muslim background, in this file photo taken on Feb. 17, 2024.

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