/ 25 October 2010

Immigrants Germany loves to hate

Immigrants Germany Loves To Hate

Chancellor Angela Merkel has declared the death of multiculturalism in Germany, saying that it had “failed utterly”, in what has been interpreted as a startling shift from her previous views.

The German leader said it had been an illusion to think that Germans and foreign workers could “live happily side by side”.

“We kidded ourselves for a while that they wouldn’t stay, but that’s not the reality,” she said at a conference of the youth wing of her Christian Democratic Union party, referring to the “gastarbeiters“, or guest workers, who arrived in Germany to fill a labour shortage during the economic boom of the 1960s.

“Of course, the tendency had been to say, ‘let’s adopt the multicultural concept and live happily side by side, and be happy to be living with one another’. But this concept has failed, and failed utterly,” she said, without elaborating on the nature and causes of the failure.

Merkel’s verdict marks a shift in her previously liberal line on immigration, which always put her at odds with the more conservative wing of the party.

While she emphasised in the same speech that immigrants were welcome in Germany and that Islam was a part of the nation’s modern-day culture, her remarks position her closer to Klaus Seehofer, the Bavarian state premier of the Christian Social Union, who called for an end to immigration from Turkey and Arab countries.

They also align her with Thilo Sarrazin, the former Bundesbank member, whose book on how the failure of many of Germany’s 16-million immigrants to integrate was contributing to Germany’s decline led to his dismissal.

Sharing the same podium as Merkel in Potsdam, Seehofer also said multiculturalism was dead and that both the right-wing parties were committed to a “dominant German culture”.

If Germany did not revise its immigration policies, he said, it was in danger of becoming “the world’s welfare office”. Seehofer insisted his statement was “an attempt to stop right-wing lunatics”, but Jurgen Trittin, for the Greens, called the comments “shabby” and in danger of “lending social acceptability to views similar to those of right-wing extremists”.

There is a labour shortage in Germany. The chamber of industry and commerce has said that Germany is short of 400 000 skilled workers and the gap is costing €25-billion a year, equivalent to 1% of growth annually.

While industrialists have called on the government to remove the obstacles preventing more skilled workers entering Germany, citing lengthy bureaucratic procedures as well as unrealistic thresholds, others say that long-term unemployed German workers should be given more of a chance first.

Merkel insisted in her speech that immigrant workers should not be considered “until we have done all we can to help our own people to become qualified and give them a chance”.

The issue has caused tension within Merkel’s year-old coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats.

Labour Minister Ursula von der Leyen, a member of Merkel’s party, has said it is an illusion to believe people are queuing up to enter Germany. “For several years more people have been leaving our country than entering it,” she said in an interview.

“Wherever it is possible, we must lower the entry hurdles for those who bring the country forward.” Merkel faces pressure to take a tougher line on immigration, particularly on so-called “integrations­verweigerer” or those immigrants who show a lack of willingness to adapt to the majority culture by, for example, refusing to attend German language classes.

While trying to embrace both sides of the debate, including repeatedly calling on Germans to accept that foreigners are a part of their country, Merkel cannot have ignored the popular response to Sarrazin’s book, or the repeated polls in which Germans have indicated a growing intolerance for immigrants, which observers say is linked to fears about economic stability.

A recent study by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation found that more than 30% of the people questioned agreed that Germany was “overrun by foreigners”, while a similar number said they believed that some immigrants had come to Germany only to take advantage of its social welfare and “should be sent home when jobs are scarce”. —