Merkel condemns 'disgusting' message of hate toward refugees

Chancellor Angela Merkel condemned on Monday violent protests against refugees that erupted over the weekend in eastern Germany, blaming them on far-right extremists who were bent on spreading a "disgusting" message of hatred.

More than 30 police were injured in clashes in the town of Heidenau near Dresden in early Saturday morning, after a mob of several hundred people, many of them drunk, began pelting officers with bottles and fireworks. Some of them shouted "Heil Hitler".

Germany, which expects the number of asylum seekers to quadruple to about 800,000 this year, has witnessed dozens of arson attacks on asylum shelters in recent months. But the violence in Heidenau, which continued on Saturday and Sunday nights, was unprecedented.

Sigmar Gabriel, vice chancellor and economy minister, traveled to the town of 16,000 on Monday, meeting with the mayor and speaking with local residents.

"There are a lot of people that worry their lives will change because of the refugees, that living here will become less secure," Gabriel said.

"But it must be clear that we don't give a single millimeter to these far-right mobs," he added. "These are people that have nothing to do with Germany. This is not the Germany we want."

Merkel, through her spokesman Steffen Seibert, said it was disgusting how right-wing extremists and neo-Nazis had tried to spread their message of hate near a shelter in Heidenau, where some 250 refugees arrived late on Friday.

"The chancellor and the whole government condemn in the strongest manner possible the violence and the aggressive atmosphere toward foreigners there," Seibert said.

On its website, Heidenau describes itself as "the friendly town on the river Elbe". A public relations video on Youtube shows an idyllic, family-oriented town, with children singing in a field of flowers and splashing each other with water from a fountain.

But Heidenau is located in an electoral district where the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) won 8.7 percent of the vote in a state election last year. It was the third-highest NPD score in all of Saxony, an eastern state of 4 million that shares a border with Poland and the Czech Republic.

Mayor Juergen Opitz, a member of Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), described the protesters as an "unholy alliance" of far-right elements from Heidenau and "Nazi tourists" who traveled from other parts of Saxony to cause trouble wherever asylum centers were set up.

Many of the refugees arriving in Germany are fleeing violence in countries like Syria, Iraq and Eritrea, but over a third are from southeastern European countries like Albania and Serbia.

related articles
Calais: How the migrant crisis shames Britain, and what we ought to do about it
Calais: How the migrant crisis shames Britain, and what we ought to do about it

Calais: How the migrant crisis shames Britain, and what we ought to do about it

Politicians using \'rancorous, prejudicial and callous\' language about migrants, says rights campaigner
Politicians using 'rancorous, prejudicial and callous' language about migrants, says rights campaigner

Politicians using 'rancorous, prejudicial and callous' language about migrants, says rights campaigner

Europe on trial: Migrant crisis is a test of the continent\'s cohesion
Europe on trial: Migrant crisis is a test of the continent's cohesion

Europe on trial: Migrant crisis is a test of the continent's cohesion

\'Illegal immigrants\': Why if I hear that again I will scream
'Illegal immigrants': Why if I hear that again I will scream

'Illegal immigrants': Why if I hear that again I will scream

\'Jesus would be with migrants in Calais, so that\'s where the Church should be\'
'Jesus would be with migrants in Calais, so that's where the Church should be'

'Jesus would be with migrants in Calais, so that's where the Church should be'

News
Three words that changed history: ‘Jesus became sin'
Three words that changed history: ‘Jesus became sin'

As we enter Easter, we want to centre our attention on the significance of Christ’s work of redemption for all of humanity.

Gloucester Cathedral to unveil stunning new pipe organ
Gloucester Cathedral to unveil stunning new pipe organ

Gloucester Cathedral has said that this year’s Organ Festival will be extra special, as it will see the unveiling of its brand new organ.

Religious freedom violations increasing in Nicaragua
Religious freedom violations increasing in Nicaragua

The situation has declined since 2018.

Päivi Räsänen calls for repeal of hate speech laws across Europe after shock conviction
Päivi Räsänen calls for repeal of hate speech laws across Europe after shock conviction

All copies of a decades old pamphlet are to be destroyed after Finland's former Minister of the Interior was convicted of hate speech - even though the law that convicted her did not exist at the time the pamphlet was published.