Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Xenophobia widespread across Germany, study reveals

-

against Muslims, migrants and asylum seekers has significan­tly increased in Germany, a new study by Leipzig University has shown. Almost 55 percent of Germans claimed they felt like foreigners because of large numbers of Muslims in the country.

A STUDY by the University of Leipzig has revealed growing suspicion and hatred towards Muslims, migrants and asylum seekers in Germany. Around 36 percent of respondent­s said they consider Germany to be dangerousl­y swamped by foreigners, the study found. More than a quarter of them said they believe foreigners should be send back to their home countries if there were a shortage of jobs in Germany.

The research has also revealed that almost 55 percent of Germans claimed they felt like foreigners in their own country because of the large numbers of Muslims. In 2010, before the refugee crisis, 33 percent of the respondent­s shared this view.

Professor Elmar Braehler, who conducted the research together with Dr. Oliver Decker, said xenophobia and prejudices against Muslims were fueling the surge of far-right party Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD). “People with farright views are now turning away from the Christian Democratic Union and the Social Democratic Party […] and finding a new home in the AfD,” he said, as reported by Anadolu Agency (AA).

Adopting an explicitly anti-Islamic rhetoric, the AfD argued that the coun- try was under the threat of “Islamizati­on,” especially after nearly one million refugees, mostly from Syria and Iraq, arrived in the country since 2015.

Germany, a country of over 81 million people, has the second-largest Muslim population in Western Europe after France. Among the country’s nearly 4.7 million Muslims, 3 million are of Turkish origin.

In recent years, the country has seen growing Islamophob­ia and hatred of migrants triggered by propaganda from far-right and populist parties, which have exploited fears over the refugee crisis and terrorism. Germany was hit by a wave of violent protests by the far right in the German city of Chemnitz in August. Nine people were injured Saturday on the sidelines of opposing demonstrat­ions by the far right and the left in the German city of Chemnitz, which was hit by anti-migrant protests. Chemnitz has been in the spotlight after violent xenophobic protests erupted over the fatal stabbing of a German man, allegedly by a Syrian and an Iraqi. The tension in the air reflects the polarizati­on over Germany’s ongoing effort to come to terms with an influx of more than 1 million refugees and migrants seeking jobs since 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye