Fatal
knife attack puts immigration top of German political agenda
Far right
seizes on arrest of Syrian immigrant suspected of killing three people ahead of
regional elections
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stories in this weekly newsletter.
https://www.ft.com/content/0f95c4c3-bfe1-4c17-bd4e-d14b6937399d
A fatal knife attack in the west German city of Solingen has
placed immigration and Islamist terrorism at the top of the political agenda
ahead of elections next Sunday that were already expected to deliver strong
gains for the far right.
The nationalist Alternative for Germany party, which is
polling strongly in the two states of Saxony and Thuringia ahead of elections
there on September 1, has turned the incident on Friday into a pillar of its
campaign.
Speaking a day after a Syrian immigrant was arrested in
Solingen on suspicion of stabbing three people to death and injuring eight
others, Björn Höcke, the AfD’s leader in Thuringia, said the attack showed
multiculturalism had failed.
“Is that your ‘diversity’? When people are cut into pieces
with machetes or horrifically slaughtered like animals, like they were in
Solingen?” Höcke, who was recently fined €17,000 for using Nazi slogans in a
speech, told an AfD rally in the small eastern town of Bad Frankenhausen on
Sunday.
“This multicultural experiment on our country will lead to
the collapse of law and order, the plundering of our welfare system and the
loss of our identity,” he told the crowd.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Monday travelled to Solingen, in
the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, to place a white rose at the scene
of Friday’s attack, which has shone a light on the threat posed by Islamist
terror as well as his government’s perceived failure to get to grips with
illegal immigration.
The suspect was a Syrian refugee who was supposed to have
been deported to Bulgaria last year, but was able to remain in Germany.
Scholz promised to tighten Germany’s laws on weapons,
especially knives, reduce the inflow of irregular migrants and increase
deportations. Already, he said, expulsions were up 30 per cent this year, and
by two-thirds since 2021. But that was no reason “to rest on our laurels”.
Scholz also promised to deal robustly with Islamist
terrorism. “We will not allow our social cohesion to be destroyed by wicked
criminals who pursue the most evil intentions,” he said.
But others, even within the chancellor’s party, cautioned
against a knee-jerk response — especially any attempt to restrict the right to
asylum enshrined in the German constitution.
“We can’t react to this by slamming the door in the faces of
people who are often themselves fleeing from Islamists,” said Kevin Kühnert,
general secretary of Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD).
Even before the Solingen attack, the AfD was cruising to
victory in the eastern elections, with polls putting it on 32 per cent in
Saxony and 30 per cent in Thuringia, ahead of the three parties in Scholz’s
coalition — the SPD, Greens and liberals — as well as Germany’s main opposition
party, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU).
The AfD has seized on the knife attack to hammer home its
anti-foreigner message.
The criticism is focused on the recent history of the
alleged assailant, identified by the authorities only as Issa Al H, a
26-year-old Syrian. He entered Germany in 2022 and applied for asylum, a
request that was rejected. Last year authorities planned to deport him to
Bulgaria, the country via which he had entered the EU. But he went into hiding
and the expulsion never took place.
Issa Al H was remanded in custody on Sunday after handing
himself in to police. He is accused of murder and belonging to the terror group
Islamic State, which claimed responsibility for the incident.
Authorities are describing it as the worst Islamist attack
in Germany since 2016, when a Tunisian refugee drove a truck into a Christmas
market in Berlin, killing 13 people and injuring 64.
The Solingen atrocity is a dilemma for Scholz. In June he
said Syrian and Afghan asylum seekers who commit serious crimes would now be
deported to their home countries, a shift that came after a policeman was
killed by a suspected Islamist extremist in the west German city of Mannheim.
But opposition politicians say there is little evidence the
tough new line is being implemented. Right-leaning media outlets routinely
carry stories about Syrians with long criminal records who remain at large in
Germany.
Experts say the issue could turn into a serious
vulnerability for Scholz ahead of Bundestag elections next year when he will
seek a second term as chancellor.
Friedrich Merz, the CDU leader, said it was time for a
fundamental rethink of immigration policy.
The government’s plan to toughen up knife laws was misguided
since it was now clear that “it’s not knives that are the problem but the
people running around with them”, Merz wrote in an email to supporters on
Sunday.
He wrote that in the majority of cases the attackers were
refugees, a claim disputed by criminologists, who say most incidents of knife
crime involve German nationals.
Merz said Scholz must immediately stop taking in refugees
from Syria and Afghanistan and create permanent controls on Germany’s borders.
Scholz’s SPD rejected his demands, however. A refusal to
take in migrants from Syria and Afghanistan was “incompatible with our laws,
with the European convention on refugees, with our constitution”, said Saskia
Esken, SPD co-leader.
Merz also got short shrift from refugee advocacy group
Pro-Asyl. “There are 1.3mn refugees from those two countries living in
Germany,” it said. “All these people should not be discredited because of one
assailant who presumably killed on the orders of IS.”
Höcke, the AfD Thuringia leader, claimed the debate on
immigration vindicated his view that it was destroying the fabric of German
society.
Höcke himself is one of the country’s most controversial
politicians. He has denounced the Holocaust memorial in Berlin as a “monument
of shame” and advocates “remigration”, the mass repatriation of foreign
immigrants.
In Bad Frankenhausen he said Scholz’s liberal policies had
made Germany “unrecognisable”.
“All the old parties have dissolved Germany like a piece of
soap in a stream of lukewarm water,” Höcke told the crowd. “It’s the AfD’s
mission to finally turn off the tap.”
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