German far right’s Höcke wants to kick disabled
kids out of regular schools
Disability campaigners and top politicians react with
fury to AfD chief’s proposal.
BY PETER
WILKE
AUGUST 10,
2023 7:24 PM CET
BERLIN —
The far-right leader of Thuringia’s AfD party, Björn Höcke, hinted at what
plans he had for the German state if he were to govern. The education system
would need to be “freed from ideology projects” such as “inclusion,” the former
teacher said in an interview Wednesday on TV channel MDR.
The current
German school model allows students with disabilities to be taught with other
students to enable equal participation in society. This was enshrined in law in
2009 with the ratification of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities.
German
politicians and disability campaigners reacted with shock when asked about
Höcke’s comments by POLITICO.
The
statements made by Höcke would give a “blatant and unvarnished view of his
world of thought,” argued Wilfried Oellers, representative for people with
disabilities of the Bundestag’s parliamentary group of the center-right
Christian Democratic Union party.
Corinna
Rüffer, the Green Party’s representative for people with disabilities, says she
was not surprised by Höcke’s remarks: “The AfD views disabilities as a disease.
Excluding people with disabilities from schools leads to exclusion from
society.”
Parliamentary
State Secretary Jens Brandenburg called Höcke’s remarks “simply inhumane,”
adding that: “Mr. Höcke is known for his Nazi references.”
“All
children deserve equal participation and more opportunities through inclusive
education,” Brandenburg said.
Jürgen
Dusel, the federal government’s Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities,
pointed out that Germany has a special responsibility because of the systematic
mass murder of disabled people by the Nazis. “That’s why it’s important for me
to make clear that inclusion is not about an ideology project, but about the
implementation of fundamental basic rights, human dignity, the development of
personality and equality before the law.”
“I myself
first went to a special school and then to a regular school. This change was a
blessing for me personally,” explained Dusel, who is severely visually
impaired. “Inclusion is by no means a burden for students without disabilities,
either, but rather an enrichment, as they thus come into contact with people
with disabilities early in their lives and don’t develop prejudices in the
first place.”
Höcke did
not respond to a request for comment from POLITICO.
Current
polls see the AfD as by far the strongest force in Thuringia with 34 percent
approval. Opposition politician Höcke stated in the interview he would like to
become the state’s head of government after the next election in the fall of
2024.
However,
that seems unlikely, as no other party in the state’s parliament cooperates
with the AfD. Thuringia’s AfD has been monitored since 2021 by the state’s
domestic intelligence service and is classified as certain to be right-wing
extremist.
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