Anti-migrant protest: Top German figures take to streets

Release statements in newspaper defending their country’s image


Afp January 07, 2015
Release statements in newspaper defending their country’s image. STOCK IMAGE

BERLIN: German political leaders, entertainers and sports stars threw their weight on Tuesday into the growing backlash against a new anti-immigration movement, leading calls to defend the country’s hard-won image for tolerance.

A day after tens of thousands again took to the streets in several cities to rally for and against a new group which opposes what it claims is the Islamisation of Europe, 50 prominent figures issued statements in a two-page spread in the Bild daily to push back.



In its latest show of strength, Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident, or PEGIDA, drew some 18,000 people to a demonstration on Monday in its hub city of Dresden in the former Communist east.

Its sudden emergence over just a few weeks and the regular staging of marches have sparked offshoot protests elsewhere, but also a counter-movement accusing PEGIDA of whipping up xenophobia.

“PEGIDA is not only damaging our country, it is also presenting a poor image of Germany,” warned Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, one of the 50 figures writing in Bild.

Ex-chancellor Helmut Schmidt, a still-influential elder statesman, said the PEGIDA protests pandered to “hollow prejudices, xenophobia and intolerance”.

“But that is not Germany,” he added, while Germany’s national football team manager Oliver Bierhoff noted the 2014 World Cup winning squad had included many players with migrant family backgrounds.

Thousands joined counter-protests on Monday in cities such as Berlin, Stuttgart and Cologne, carrying placards such as one that read “Disgrace For Our Country”. Numbers at some demonstrations far outnumbered PEGIDA’s supporters.



In Berlin, around 5,000 took part in the anti-PEGIDA rally, compared to around 300 in support of the group.

Cologne’s imposing Gothic cathedral, carmaker VW’s plant in Dresden and the iconic Brandenburg Gate in the capital Berlin dimmed their lights in protest against PEGIDA, following the lead of Dresden’s Semper opera house a fortnight earlier.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 7th, 2014.

COMMENTS (3)

roohafza | 9 years ago | Reply

@Bewildered: Superior? In the 1st Century A.D. the Roman Emperors had a tough time trying to conquer the anglo-saxon tribes of Germany because they were barbarians. 2000 years later they still can't speak softly - german sounds like one's abusing.

Bewildered | 9 years ago | Reply

Many Germans have a history of mental illness that makes them believe that Germans are the most superior race in the world, and the rest of the human beings are of lesser quality intellectually and physically. This phenomenon made them commit the holocaust of Jews, and this thinking is also the driving force behind the "White Movement" started decades ago. Now, the same hate-mongers have gathered under the flag of "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident". Due to their neurotic and phobic natures, they are afraid of being overtaken by the speedy spread of Islam in the West, either through immigrants, or through the locals accepting Islam, and are now trying stop it though the same tactics they had used against Jews.

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