Anti-migrant protesters attack refugee camp in Germany

Published August 26, 2015
Duisburg: German Chancellor Agela Merkel greets people on Tuesday after she arrived here for a “citizen dialogue”.—AFP
Duisburg: German Chancellor Agela Merkel greets people on Tuesday after she arrived here for a “citizen dialogue”.—AFP

BERLIN: Germany scrambled on Tuesday to quell a wave of anti-migrant violence, as a suspected arson attack hit a planned refugee shelter just hours after Chancellor Angela Merkel denounced xenophobic protests as “vile”.

Vowing to take tough action against perpetrators of such attacks, top politicians sought to reassure the unprecedented number of migrants arriving in the country that far-right extremists did not represent Germany.

“With regards to xenophobic violence, there can only be one answer: police, justice and, if possible for those we catch, prison as well,” said Vice Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel.

Merkel, who has been criticised for failing to forcefully address the wave of anti-migrant sentiment until this week, will on Wednesday visit a refugee centre targeted by far-right extremists and neo-Nazis in the eastern town of Heidenau.

President Joachim Gauck will make a trip to a refugee centre in Berlin, also on Wednesday.

“Despite the scale of the challenge, there are many instances in which things are working well,” said Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere, at a refugee centre on Tuesday, according to German news agency DPA.

Germany is expecting to receive a record number of 800,000 asylum-seekers this year, four times higher than the number in 2014.

The sudden surge in people coming from war zones such as Syria as well as countries that are not at war like Albania and Kosovo has left the authorities struggling to cope.

It has also exposed anti-migrant sentiment, particularly in eastern Germany, which still lags behind the western part of the country in terms of jobs and opportunities 25 years after reunification.

The latest case of suspected arson hit a temporary shelter in a sports hall in Nauen, a town near Berlin, just a week before 130 refugees are due to move in.

Police said the speed of the flames ripping through the site early on Tuesday suggested arson was the cause. The state president of Brandenburg, where Nauen is located, Dietmar Woidke urged residents to “distance yourself from xenophobic mobs”.

Published in Dawn, August 26th, 2015

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