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German far right capitalises on high-profile migrant crimes

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COTTBUS: “Refugees are bringing crime into our town,” an election leaflet declares — an example of how Germany’s far-right feeds its narrative of a country threatened by more than a million new arrivals.


Alternative for Germany (AfD) hopes the strategy that made it the biggest opposition party in 2017’s general election will pay off once again next month, when voters elect a new European Parliament.


Its 12.6-per cent score almost two years ago was a shock to the political system, bringing 94 far-right MPs into a legislature with a history of moderation going back to 1949.


Hammering the message that led to its success, AfD lead candidate Joerg Meuthen said: “Germany can no longer take in migrants.” “Knife attacks, rapes and violent acts against women are proportionally more likely to be committed by people from different cultural background than by ‘people from here’,” he asserted.


Police statistics show that 38.6 per cent of violent crimes were committed by foreigners in 2018, but crime in Germany is also at its lowest since the country’s reunification in 1990.


“Every single news story in which foreigners are implicated, especially migrants, is blown out of proportion and generalised” to the whole non-German population, argued Miro Dittrich of the anti-racist Amadeu Antonio Foundation.


‘FAKE NEWS’


Already-existing fears of the migrant threat were turbocharged on December 31, 2015.


Germans were horrified as dozens of women reported falling victim to sexual violence at New Year’s Eve street celebrations around Cologne’s main train station.


The acts blamed mostly on young asylum seekers formed the foundation for the far-right’s narrative of dangerous foreigners.


Since then, the names of towns and cities where individual crimes have been committed by migrants or asylum seekers have resonated through the media and social networks.


Among them is a case in Kandel, near the French border, where a 15-year-old girl was stabbed to death by her Afghan ex-boyfriend.


Armed with her photo and slogans about her death, the local AfD branch organised demonstrations against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s asylum policy for months afterwards.


And in Chemnitz, AfD supporters marched against migrants on several occasions after the knife killing of a German man.


Invented episodes of violence by migrants also frequently make the rounds online, building on the climate of fear generated by true events.


The aim is often to depict any and all asylum seekers as potential killers or rapists.


One far-right blog chronicles women’s lives “since the invasion” as apparently marked only by violence and murder.


One post that was retweeted thousands of times described how a woman’s body was thrown into a ditch after she was assaulted by a migrant.


But the suspect later turned out to be someone close to the victim.


Police in Saxony subsequently accused a local chapter of the AfD of spreading “incendiary, repugnant and oversimplified fake news”.


TAKEN OUT OF CONTEXT


“This is an old way of communicating: whatever the message is, in the end something will stick in people’s heads,” anti-racist activist Dittrich said.


“One former AfD member described how the party handles information. If it turns out not to be true, they don’t mind cutting corners, taking things out of context or just lying openly,” he added.


In Chemnitz and Cottbus, AfD demonstrators brandished photos supposedly showing 16 women “attacked” by “migrants”.


— AFP


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