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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Germany
How the conservative CDU/CSU alliance in Germany stirs up
hatred against foreigners
By Elizabeth Zimmermann
30 November 2000
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On November 9, Edmund Stoiber, Angela Merkel and Friedrich
Merzleading representatives of the German CDU (Christian
Democratic Union) and the CSU (Christian Social Union)appeared
together on a platform at a demonstration in Berlin held under
the slogan For humanity and tolerance. The scene was
reminiscent of the Mafia godfather who goes to confession on Sunday
before returning to his normal criminal activities on Monday.
Since this travesty, both the CDU and CSU have laid bare their
inhumanity and intolerance towards foreigners. Both stand for
a sharp limit to immigration and the abolition of the constitutional
right to asylum, and hope to gain political capital from campaigns
on these issues.
Three days before the Berlin demonstration, the CDU had already
presented its new immigration policy. On the one hand, its white
paper tries to comply with the business community's demand for
qualified foreigner workers and to promote the legal framework
this will require. For the first time since the imposition of
a general recruitment freeze on non-EU (European Union) foreigners
in the 1970s, the CDU is now acknowledging the necessity for a
limited degree of immigration into Germany.
At the same time, barriers against unwanted foreignersand
this means refugees in particularare being further increased.
The economic and national interests of Germany are to have express
priority over humanitarian and democratic principles.
Originally the white paper, formulated under the guidance of
CDU Saarland Prime Minister Peter Müller, was to contain
the words: Germany is a land of immigration and the
the boat is not full yet. On the demand of Friedrich
Merz (chairman of the CDU/CSU parliamentary faction) and Angela
Merkel (chairperson of the CDU), both phrases were struck from
the paper. The phrase the defining German culturepreviously
rejected by Peter Müllerwas inserted in the slightly
modified form: the defining culture in Germany. What
is being demanded is compliance with and integration into
the system of values and regulations which we currently deem appropriate.
The paper continues: Having a good command of the German
language should be to the applicant's advantagefor example,
in relation to decisions about his immigration application, the
issuing of a work permit or the granting of permanent residency.
On the other hand, it ought to be possible to oblige immigrantsat
least those dependent on social support from the stateto
take part in integration courses, especially language courses.
Thomas Schäuble, CDU Interior Minister for the state of
Baden-Wurttemberg, has already announced his intention to introduce
a bill into the upper house of the federal parliament in order
to compel foreigners to participate in German language and culture
courses. According to the proposed legislation, if participation
in such courses is refused, or if an immigrant fails to benefit
from them, a continued right to reside in the country should
be withheld.
The cynical nature of these demands becomes obvious when one
remembers how such language courses have been systematically denied
in recent years due to budget cutbacks. Thousands of immigrants
who would have jumped at the chance of learning German have thereby
been deprived of the opportunity or the financial means to do
so.
In the final analysis, it is clear that the CDU is aiming to
create a two-class legal standard for foreigners. Whoever has
the desired educational qualifications and financial resources
isto a certain degreewelcome. On the other hand, a
person who wants to enter Germany as a refugee or as someone driven
by economic necessity has no chance. The CDU is trying to meet
the requirements of big business while simultaneously keeping
open the option of instigating campaigns against foreigners in
the approaching electionsas it did in Hessen during the
1999 state election and as faction chairman Merz has long demanded.
The CDU is also seeking drastic limitations on the right of
foreigners to reunite with their families. These restrictions
are formulated in rather general terms in the immigration proposals.
However a clarification of the issue made by Wolfgang
Bosbach, deputy chairman of the CDU/CSU federal parliamentary
faction, makes patently obvious what is actually intended. According
to Bosbach, a policy of family reunification corresponding to
the guidelines of the EU Commission would result in the entrance
of up to 250,000 immigrants per year. Therefore, the CDU categorically
rejects these guidelines. In this respect, Bosbach sees himself
as being in agreement with Otto Schily, the Social Democratic
Federal Minister of the Interior. If these EU guidelines were
in fact implemented, Bosbach believes there would be only
a limited chance for securing a new immigration policy complying
with Germany's interests.
The right to political asylum also comes under attack in the
CDU's white paper, although the yearly number of asylum-seekers
has declined from 400,000 to 100,000 since the changes to the
Constitution in 1993. Combating the abuse of the right
to asylum is declared to be a matter of priority. Moreover, the
policy paper demands a transformation of the right to asylum
into a institutional guarantee within the framework of European
harmonization.
In reality, this would be tantamount to the abolition of the
right to asylum. The legal claim to asylum would be transformed
into an act of mercy dependent on the arbitrary discretion of
the state. Unfair procedures could no longer be contested in a
court of lawas is the case with any genuine right. Instead,
a state committee would rulein the manner of a feudal squirarchyon
the legitimacy of a refugee's right to remain in the country.
The reference to European harmonization amounts
to pure chicanery. The handling of claims to asylum in Germany
has already declined below standards set by the Geneva Convention
on Refugees and other human rights accords signed by the German
Federal Republic. And, as the previous example concerning family
reunification reveals, the Red-Green federal government has striven
to prevent the modest improvements to human rights recommended
by the EU Commission from coming into force for the time being.
It is simply not so that a more generous and comprehensive right
to asylum in Germany will be formulated in order to comply with
European harmonization. The opposite will be the case.
The CSU party convention
In mid-November the CDU's Bavarian alliance partner, the CSU,
exhibited a hostility to foreigners which was even more brazen
and venomous. Immigration policy was the central issue at the
CSU party convention in Munich. It consisted of countless variations
on the theme introduced by Bavarian Interior Minister Günter
Becksteinof foreigners who are useful to us
and foreigners who want to use us.
A much celebrated guest at the party convention was Wolfgang
Schüssel, the Austrian head of state who achieved international
notoriety for helping the extreme right-wing Jörg Haider
(Austrian Freedom Party) into the federal government. It is becoming
increasingly clear that the CSU protested so vehemently against
European sanctions on Austria principally because it intends to
emulate Haider's populist election campaigns and methods.
The party convention endorsed a white paper entitled Germany
should not become a traditional land of immigration that
was formulated by Beckstein in much more explicit language than
that of the CDU's policy statement.
The emotionally charged phrase defining German culture
is demonstratively cited in this document. Thesis 1 states: The
basis for Germans and foreigners living together is the defining
culture of fundamental Western European values rooted in Christianity,
the Enlightenment and humanitarianism.
Thesis 2 demands a limitation to immigration from non-EU states.
Thesis 3 acknowledges that, within certain limits, a moderate,
socially compatible degree of immigration would be practicable
for economic and employment policy reasons as well as advisable
on humanitarian grounds. Thesis 4 gets to the bottom of
the matter. There it is stated that Only a limitation of
continuing high, uncontrolled immigration into Germany will create
the opportunity for an admission of foreigners which is in the
interests of the state and the society. The contrast between
foreigners seeking protection and immigrants advantageous to the
German economy could not be expressed more clearly.
Thesis 5 calls for a discarding of the right to asylum which
is much more explicit than the CDU paper, while Thesis 6 demands
an acceleration of the asylum procedure, as well as further disadvantages
for refugees in relation to social support and protracted legal
cases. Furthermore, the carrying out of deportations must be tightened
up and more efficiently organised in order to dispel any
incentive for immigration through the channels of asylum-seeking.
For anyone familiar with the current conditions in German prisons
for deportees and the brutally callous extradition of thousands
of people each year, it is difficult to imagine how this practice
could be even more efficiently organised. Are Beckstein
and the CSU considering mass deportations into countries torn
by civil warlike Sri Lanka, Turkey and many African countries?
Theses 7 and 9 criticise the EU recommendations concerning
family reunification: The planned extension of the right
of people to reunite with their families from a third country
and the recommended raising of minimum standards for asylum procedures
to a level clearly exceeding legal conditions in Germany ruin
all hope of limiting the influx of immigrants on a national basis.
A further tightening of existing regulations in Germany is called
for: As a prerequisite for the reunification of families,
applicants should possess integration skills, such as mastery
of the German language. The age of children eligible for family
reunification should be reduced from the current limit of 6 to
16 years of age, to 10 years at the most.
Thesis 10 lists the types of foreigners to be welcomed because
of their usefulness to the economyforeign qualified
workers, businessmen and scientists. The precise number
is to be determined through immigration law and annually revised
quotas. According to Thesis 11: The quota for immigration
advantageous to the national economy and the labour market will
be set by the federal government in accordance with statutory
order and with the approval of the upper house of the Federal
Parliament, based upon consideration of the current employment
situation.
The reactionary and often racist tone of these theses was even
more obvious in the discussion at the party convention. Edmund
Stoiber, the Bavarian State prime minister and CSU chairman, defended
use of the term defining culture and explained that
this entailed not only a command of the German language but, above
all, a readiness to adapt oneself to the German society.
In all of this there was not the slightest trace of cosmopolitan
openness or tolerance of other cultures.
Günter Beckstein explained that he understood defining
culture to mean that there would be no minarets in Upper
Bavarian villages. Alois Glück, the chairman of the Bavarian
state parliament, claimed that people who today speak about defining
culture in a disparaging way have lost contact with
their own identity and patriotism. He demanded that the
asylum procedure should last no longer than six months.
Red-Green government makes its own concessions
If one is to believe the statements of social-democratic and
Green politicians these days, the recommendations of the CDU/CSU
alliance have little chance of being supported by a majority in
the lower and upper houses of the federal parliament at the moment.
But this would be a misleading impression. Taking into account
the behaviour of the Red-Green government up till now, one can
assume that it will react to the current campaign of the conservatives
by also moving further to the right.
One recalls the 1993 constitutional changes that the Kohl government
was able to push through the federal parliament only with the
support of the SPD (Social Democratic Party). At the time, the
watering down of the constitutional right to asylum had been preceded
by an inflammatory, months-long campaign against an alleged abuse
of the right to asylum. While this was going on, there was
a dramatic increase in the number of murders and arson attacks
on the lives and homes of foreigners and refugees. The reaction
of the SPD to this wave of violence was to capitulate and take
up the demands of the conservative alliance.
Things are much the same today. During the election campaign
for the state parliament in Hessen in 1999, no social democrat
or Green was prepared to go on the offensive to defend the right
to dual citizenship against the nationalistic campaign being waged
by the CDU at the time. Instead, on their own initiative and fawning
to the CDU, they quickly decided to advocate the reduction of
dual citizenship to a much smaller group of potential claimants.
In light of the current campaign by the conservative alliance
and the everyday practice of German organs of state, it is no
wonder that the scale of racist and radical right-wing attacks
has markedly increased since then. Nazi thugs feel they have been
given the green light.
Today one still comes across those who believe that the SPD
and Greens will prevent an abolition of the right to asylum. In
terms of practice, however, there is little to separate the Red-Greens
from the conservatives.
The arguments used by the CDU to justify a transformation of
the right to asylum into an institutional guarantee were poachedin
part, word for wordfrom Otto Schily, the SPD Federal Interior
Minister. For his part, Schily has described the CDU's new white
paper as a sound basis for achieving a compromise in relation
to the legal regulation of immigration.
In an interview with the Rheinische Post at the end
of October, Dieter Wiefelspütz, the SPD parliamentary faction's
spokesman for domestic policy, claimed it would be possible to
achieve agreement on the question of immigration within a few
months: All sides are making compromisesthe conservative
alliance, the SPD and the Greens, tooso it's certainly possible
that we'll come to agreement.
Wiefelspütz went on to explain: The right to asylum
is not up for negotiation. But we can and must talk about everything
else. There won't be much leeway when it comes to the asylum procedure.
But we'll have to take another look at that, too.
He clearly signalled the conservative alliance that he was
in favour of a hard line on deportations: If anyone is wrongfully
in Germany and is obliged to leave the country after a final legal
ruling, then we have the right to enforce his exitwith all
means at our disposal under the rule of law. We are certainly
prepared to intensify our efforts in this respect.
See Also:
The debate over a "defining German
culture":
the Christian Democrats march to the right
[25 November 2000]
The debate over a "defining culture"
in Germany
German Christian Democrats attack the Central Jewish Council
[22 November 2000]
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