New German anti-Muslim party calls Islam ‘totalitarian’

Stadtkewitz and Wilders posterThe leader of a newly created anti-Islamic party in Germany said he wants to stop the immigration of Muslims and described Islam as a “totalitarian system” bent on supplanting western liberal values.

In an interview with The National, Rene Stadtkewitz, 46, said Muslims were not integrating into German society as well as other immigrants and that authorities should become stricter, by banning headscarves in school, stopping public funding for teaching young children the Quran and curbing the influence of Islamic organisations.

“Islam is far more than a religion. It’s an entire model of society that is incredibly binding for many people,” he said. “It’s basically a political system with its own legal system that seeks to regulate all aspects of life. We criticise the socio-political component of Islam, which I see as an ideological one similar to other totalitarian systems, and which I think is dangerous.”

He called Islam “the opposite of a free society” and said the faith posed a threat because it sought to instil different values in Germany, and because it encouraged immigrants to segregate themselves.

Mr Stadtkewitz, a former member of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU), set up his party, Freedom, last October. He had been expelled from the CDU’s parliamentary group in the Berlin city assembly for inviting Geert Wilders, the controversial Dutch Islam critic and head of the Party for Freedom, to Berlin for a conference.

Mr Stadtkewitz said his party now had 1,400 members and was setting up regional branches across Germany. It plans to contest its first election in September when Berlin votes for a new mayor and city parliament. Mr Stadtkewitz said the aim was to cross the 5 per cent threshold needed to obtain seats in the assembly. “If that goes well, we’ll prepare for the general election in 2013,” he said.

He wants a temporary halt to immigration and favours introducing Swiss-style referendums in Germany. He said he would not stand in the way of a public vote on banning the construction of minarets, as Switzerland did in 2009, although he saw such a move as just “scratching at the surface” of the problem.

Mr Stadtkewitz denied accusations that he was a far-right populist. He said his party was espousing mainstream views about Islam and was part of an “uprising” by people across Europe against growing Islamic influence. “Anyone who criticises Islam stands in the centre of society,” he said. “Islam is becoming more visible in western countries and people are starting to rise up against that.”

The National, 7 February 2011

Outside of Germany, it may be recalled, one of the Freedom Party’s most prominent supporters is Daniel Pipes.

Extremists protest at topping out ceremony for Cologne mosque

Cologne mosque protest February 2011Several dozen right-wing extremists protested on Wednesday as the top beams were added to Germany’s largest mosque under construction in the city of Cologne.

Ditib mosque federation said the building would not only be “a home for the Muslim community”, but also a place to meet non-Muslims, at the topping out ceremony which traditionally marks the moment a building’s roof structure is completed. “This construction is not a one-way street – just like the process of integration itself,” said the Muslim federation.

The mosque, designed for 1,200 people, features a 37-metre-high dome and two minarets standing 55 metres tall. The final site, occupying 5,000 square metres, is to include a cultural centre and meeting point.

“Interreligious and intercultural dialogue will be revitalized by this mosque,” said Bekir Alboga of Ditib. He stressed that non-Muslims were also welcome to attend the sermons, which would also be translated into German.

Building work began in November 2009, after people in Cologne criticized the proposed mosque for being too big and staged a series of anti-Islamic demonstrations. Lale Akguen, an author and former parliamentarian of Turkish origin, on Wednesday reiterated the criticism and said Ditib intended the mosque to be a symbol of power. “The construction will cement parallel communities,” the Central Council of Ex-Muslims feared.

However the mayor of Cologne, Juergen Roters, rejected the criticism. “If Muslims in Germany build large, representative mosques, this is a sign of normality,” Roters said.

DPA, 2 February 2011

Another German state considers veil ban for civil servants

The German state of Lower Saxony is considering banning the Islamic full-face veil for civil servants, its interior minister said Thursday, after a neighbouring region said it would take similar measures. “The burqa has no place in public service,” Uwe Schuenemann told the Neue Presse regional daily. “Lower Saxony is currently looking at legal regulations for employees and officials.”

On Wednesday, the western state of Hesse prohibited the wearing of the veil for civil servants, the first of Germany’s 16 states to enact such a regulation. “Civil service employees and those who come into contact with citizens should not be veiled,” said Hesse’s interior minister Boris Rhein in a statement.

AFP, 3 February 2011

German state imposes veil ban on civil servants

Civil servants in the central German state of Hesse are now forbidden from wearing burqas. The announcement came Wednesday after a city employee in Frankfurt communicated that she would not reveal her face when she returned from maternity leave.

“Civil servants may not be veiled, especially those who have contact with citizens,” Hesse’s Interior Minister Boris Rhein said Wednesday after the woman’s attorney and the city agreed she would not return to work on Tuesday and would remain home until the situation was sorted out. Rhein added that, while a headscarf was allowed, the donning of a burqa could be perceived as “hostile to Western values.”

The city of Frankfurt had told the mother of four – who previously did not wear a burqa to work – that she must choose between the veil and her job. City staff department head Markus Frank justified the decision, saying “our employees show their faces. That is a basic requirement for building trust.”

Deutsche Welle, 2 February 2011

Die Linke politician faces jail for insulting Sarrazin

Helmut_ManzA regional politician has been fined €1,500 or 50 days in jail for allegedly calling Thilo Sarrazin, the author of a controversial book criticizing Muslim immigrants, an “ass.”

Helmut Manz, 43, the deputy spokesman of the opposition Left Party in the western state of North Rhine-Westphalia, was overheard uttering the word at a demonstration outside a convention hall in the city of Dortmund where Sarrazin was speaking. Sarrazin filed a legal complaint when he heard about the insult.

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Suspect arrested in connection with Berlin mosque arson attacks

A 30-year-old man was arrested Friday evening in Berlin’s Neukölln district on suspicion of arson, following a series of attacks on several mosques in the German capital, a police spokesman said. Investigators apprehended the man at the Blaschkoallee U-Bahn station.

The arrest follows a wave of arson attacks on Muslim houses of worship in Berlin in recent months. No one was injured, but the fires caused property damage in every case.

A police spokesman said the man arrested Friday is suspected of involvement in four of seven arson attacks on Berlin mosques since June of last year. Investigators are examining whether the suspect has any connection to the other incidents.

The Local, 22 January 2011

Another arson attack on a Berlin mosque

Police in Berlin are investigating an arson attack on a mosque in the capital city after a man walking past saw flames at the entrance in the early hours of Saturday morning.

Detectives said on Saturday there was a message left at the site of the attack at the Ahmadiyya community in the Wilmersdorf district of Berlin, but did not reveal what it said.

Someone had set the entrance to the mosque on fire, but the passer-by noticed the flames at around 1:45 am on Saturday, and started putting out the blaze himself. When police officers arrived, they finished off the job with a fire extinguisher from their vehicle.

Criminal detectives are now on the case, trying to determine whether there is a link between this attack and arson attacks on other mosques during 2010.

The last six months of last year saw six such attacks – the Shitlik mosque on Columbiadamm was attacked in June, twice in August and again in November, while the Neukölln Al-Nur mosque was attacked in November and an Islamic cultural centre in Tempelhof was targeted in December.

No-one was hurt in any of the attacks, but damage was done in every case.

The Local, 8 January 2011

The German Geert Wilders

Stadkewitz with WildersA former member of Chancellor Merkel’s Christian Democrats has formed a party to attract voters enthralled by Thilo Sarrazin and disappointed by Germany’s existing parties.

Berlin politician René Stadkewitz’s new Freedom Party aims to leverage fear of Islam for political ends.

Spiegel Online profiles Germany’s answer to Geert Wilders.

Muslims seen as threat in France, Germany

Four in 10 French and German people see Muslims living in their country as a “threat”, according to a poll published on Tuesday by French newspaper Le Monde.

Forty-two percent of French people and 40% of Germans questioned by pollster Ifop said they considered the presence of a Muslim community in their country “a threat” to their national identity, Le Monde said. The findings of the study “go beyond linking immigration with security or immigration with unemployment, to linking Islam with a threat to identity”, said Jerome Fourquet of Ifop, quoted by Le Monde.

Of the sample of people questioned for the survey in early December, 68% in France and 75% in Germany said they considered Muslims “not well integrated in society”. Out of these, 61% of French and 67% of Germans blamed this perceived failure on “refusal” by Muslims to integrate. Eighteen percent of those who said Muslims were not integrated in France and 15% in Germany blamed it on “racism and lack of openness by certain French and German people”.

AFP, 4 January 2011