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Moscow: Putin Meeting with Angela Merkel and Francois Hollande

February 6, 2015 By administrator

41d53540c75488097d66The Kremlin is hosting a meeting between Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande. Discuss ways to resolve the situation in the south-eastern Ukraine. Report kremlin.ru

Negotiations are taking place behind closed doors without the participation of members of delegations and experts.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: foreign policy, France, Germany, Ukraine

The two accomplices of the genocide Turkey & Germany deny Armenian Genocide

January 25, 2015 By administrator

Germany-fm-genocide-denierGerman Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

The government of Germany has declared that it is against labeling the mass massacres of Armenians that Turkey continues to deny as genocide as the Armenian genocide and is not planning any commemoration for the anniversary.

According to Armenia, up to 1.5 million Ottoman Armenians were killed starting from 1915. Turkey denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll during the mass deportation of Ottoman Armenians has been inflated and that those killed in 1915 and 1916 were victims of general unrest during the World War I.

Upon a parliamentary question from Die Linke, which is the main opposition party in Germany, the German Foreign Ministry clarified its position regarding the 1915 events with a written statement. According to the four-point response, the question whether the events constituted genocide should be answered by historians and the issue should be solved between Turkey and Armenia.

The statement also stressed that the United Nations’ 1948 convention, which defines genocide, does not apply retroactively.

“We are informed about the initiatives planned by Armenian communities for the 100th anniversary of the 1915/1916 events. The German government currently has no action plan for commemorations at the moment,” the statement added.

Ulla Jelpke, a member of the Bundestag from Die Linke, said the German government’s stance was “unacceptable.” After claiming that the German and Ottoman Turkish governments of the time were “accomplices,” Jelpke said the current government in Berlin was “evading responsibility.”

On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman government signed the Deportation Law, which stipulated the forced migration of Ottoman Armenians.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan recently rebuffed an invitation by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan to attend ceremonies marking the centenary of the Battle of Gallipoli in Çanakkale on April 24, 2015.

In a landmark statement on the Armenian issue delivered on April 23, 2014, Erdoğan highlighted the “shared pain” endured during the 1915 events, expressing condolences on behalf of the Turkish state to the grandchildren of Armenians who lost their lives “in the context of the early 20th century.”

Then-Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, on the other hand, labeled the deportation as “wrong” and “inhumane” in December 2013.

But Turkey still denies that the mass massacres account for a genocide, a position which is relayed by the media that is bound to respect the official history line to avoid any sanctions, regardless historic facts and the personal opinions of editors.

Israeli Ambassador to Azerbaijan Rafael Harpaz announced early this month that the Tel Aviv government would not recognize the events as genocide.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: accomplices, armenian genocide, deny, Germany, ww1

Two Turkish-origin men arrested as German police raid Islamists in Berlin

January 16, 2015 By administrator

BERLIN – Agence France-Presse

n_77023_1Special police force guards the entrance of a house in Berlin as police raids several residences in Berlin on suspicion of recruiting fighters and procuring equipment and funding Islamists in Syria, Jan. 16. AP Photo

Scores of German police raided alleged Islamist sites in Berlin early on Jan. 16, arresting two men suspected of being part of a group planning to carry out an attack in Syria, police said.

Around 250 police officers carried out the raids on 11 sites in the German capital, arresting the two men of Turkish origin aged 41 and 43, police said in a statement.

One of the men, identified as Ismet D., 41, is suspected of “leading an Islamist extremist group made up of Turkish and Russian nationals from (the Caucasus regions’ of) Chechnya and Dagestan,” the police said.

The other man, identified as Emin F., 43, is suspected of organising the financing, the statement said, adding there was “no indication that the group planned attacks inside Germany.”

The two men were part of a group of five people, all of Turkish origin, who had been under investigation by police and prosecutors for several months, they added.

The were under suspicion of preparing a serious act of violence in Syria and money laundering.

The German raids came just hours after two suspected Islamists were killed in a massive police raid on suspected jihadists in Belgium and a week after Islamist attacks in Paris claimed 17 lives.

Chancellor Angela Merkel on Jan. 15 vowed to heighten security measures against Islamist militants in the wake of the Paris attacks, vowing that Germany would not be divided by extremism of any kind.

“Hate preachers, violent delinquents who act in the name of Islam, those behind them, and the intellectual arsonists of international terrorism will be rigorously fought with all legal means at the disposal of the state,” she said in a speech to parliament.

January/16/2015

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: arrested, Germany, turkish-oregin man

Anti-Islam rally draws big crowds in Germany city of Dresden

January 13, 2015 By administrator

202025_newsdetailA large crowd showed up for an anti-Islam rally Monday in Dresden, where some protesters wore black ribbons to show their solidarity with the 17 victims of last week’s terror attacks in Paris.

The weekly anti-Islam rallies started last October and are being organized by a group called the Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West, or PEGIDA. Dresden police said they couldn’t yet give exact numbers for Monday night’s rally, but last week’s drew 18,000 people.

One of the organizers of the Dresden rally, Lutz Bachmann, told the crowds that “the terrible acts of Paris are further proof that PEGIDA is needed.”

Some marchers held up placards with the names of the French journalists killed by extremists in Paris. Others sported banners condemning the “lying press” that they claimed misrepresents their cause. One poster showed Chancellor Angela Merkel wearing a headscarf.

One marcher, Markus Bauer of Bautzen, said he had come to express his disgust about what he called the “ruling class.”

“Wall Street controls them all. They are responsible for all the wars and people know that,” he said.

Yet in other cities across Germany, those attending counter protests urging that immigrants be welcomed and treated fairly far outnumbered the anti-Islam demonstrators.

Berlin police said 4,000 people demonstrated against an anti-Islam rally of 400 protesters. In Munich 20,000 people took to the streets to support tolerance and only 1,500 anti-Islam protesters showed up.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-Islam rally, Germany

Germany: Thousands march against anti-Islam ‘Pegida’ movement

January 6, 2015 By administrator

0,,18171905_303,00German citizens gathered by the thousands in several demonstrations against the anti-Islam movement “Pegida.” Politicians said they were proud of the large numbers of people supporting immigrants. Report DW

Citizens thronged to streets in German cities to protest the anti-Islam movement “PEGIDA,” members of which gather nearly every Monday to rally against a perceived Islamization of Western countries.

The Mayor of Stuttgart in Germany’s southern state of Baden Württemberg, Fritz Kuhn, expressed “pride and joy” at the large numbers of anti-PEGIDA demonstrators, saying it was a clear statement against the marginalization of immigrants and for integrating refugees into German culture.

“Refugees are welcome in Stuttgart,” Kuhn said, adding that Stuttgart was no place for people who discriminated against others. Kuhn also appealed to people of other cities to not give in and “become a tool for right-extremist Neonazis.”

Protesters were also gathering in other German cities to rally against PEGIDA- an acronym for Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West.

The cathedral in Cologne, one of Germany’s most prominent landmarks, announced that it would switch off its floodlights during the PEGIDA’s anti-Islam demonstrations on Monday, to challenge xenophobic sentiments.

Redefining Germans’

Meanwhile, German authorities expressed concern about growing support for PEGIDA. The German Police Union (GdP) warned that officers deployed in border areas had observed growing numbers of immigrants.

The Union demanded that German politicians acknowledge the country as an immigration country and create the required infrastructure. This would include accommodating the refugees and a speedy and just process for asylum seekers.

Researchers of German political parties in the parliament have also asked for a new orientation for Germany. Migrants should be able to find a place as equal citizens, Werner Schiffauer, head of the Council of Migration told German news agency dpa.

“It is important that we redefine the word, “We Germans,” Schiffauer said.

mg/bw (dpa, kna)

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-islam, demonstration, Germany, pegida

Al-Qaeda-affiliate Tahşiyeciler tried to expand to Germany, Azerbaijan, Russia

December 23, 2014 By administrator

200225_newsdetailA public indictment prepared in 2010 against Tahşiyeciler (Annotators), a radical religious group supportive of al-Qaeda’s global jihadist ideology, has revealed how members of the group tried to establish branches abroad, including in Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Germany, Iraq and Russia. Reported by Today Zaman

According to an indictment prepared by Public Prosecutor Kadir Altınışık and investigation case file No. 2010/439, the group, which clearly advocated violent methods and supported al-Qaeda’s extremist ideology, tried to expand its activities to Germany and Azerbaijan. The prosecutor said the investigation had identified Ali Karakale, a member of the group, and suspected that he was leading Tahşiyeciler’s branch in Germany, while Hüseyin Büyükfırat and Agil Farajov headed the organization in Azerbaijan.

In a court-authorized wiretapped conversation recorded on Dec. 6, 2009 and included in the indictment as evidence, a suspect named Süphan Akarsu talks to another suspect named Faris Mağin, saying: “The way to an open jihad is clear. Go to Chechnya and Pakistan, where a real jihad is under way. Going there is a must.” Fearing that the conversation might have been recorded, Mağin tells Akarsu not to speak up openly and then the suspects switch to Kurdish from Turkish for the rest of the conversation. The police added the translated version of the conversation to the investigation file as well. In a wiretap dated Jan. 1, 2010, Lütfü Karadağ, another suspect in the case, tells Mağin that defending democracy is tantamount to disbelief.

The prosecutor’s indictment charges Mehmet Nuri Ataç, a suspect who was involved in expanding Tahşiyeciler’s network in Bursa, with trying to organize trips for young men to go to places like Iraq and Afghanistan, which he claimed to be fertile places to wage a jihad. In a sound recording included in the indictment and numbered 750, Ataç tells a young man identified only by the initials Ç.A. to prepare himself to go to jihadist regions, a reference to Afghanistan, Chechnya, Iraq and Pakistan, saying that $1,800 would be enough to cover expenses for the trip and that a broker would make sure he reached his destination.

A sound recording numbered 778 contains two conversations between Ataç and another suspect named Orhan Özer during which the two discuss al-Qaeda’s terrorist attacks in Afghanistan and how to transfer funds raised locally in Turkey to Afghanistan. Özer told Ataç that two people named Sedat and İbrahim had already been dispatched to Afghanistan to join al-Qaeda there, adding that he may very well facilitate Ataç’s trip there, too.

Police also monitored Ataç’s emails with people identified as M.S.S, Ç.A. and Mustafa during which Ataç and others wrote about linking up with Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda groups. Ataç noted in his emails that he desires to fight on behalf of al-Qaeda and become a suicide bomber. In a message dated Jan. 17, 2010, Ataç wrote to an unidentified person that he wanted to make a trip to Afghanistan via Iran, saying that it would take only 20 days to reach jihadist places in Afghanistan by bus or walking after Iran. He said he has the necessary funds for the trip but lamented that he does not have $1,000 to purchase a Kanas, the Turkish name for a Dragunov sniper rifle.

In the case file, the prosecutor also listed an anonymous complaint that was sent to the İstanbul Police Department in which the whistleblower alleged that Mehmet Doğan, the leader of Tahşiyeciler, had been raising funds for al-Qaeda and sent a delegation of people who he thought worthy to Osama bin Laden. The whistleblower also claimed that Büyükfırat had transferred TL 2 million (approximately $860,000) to the organization and helped translate Doğan’s book into Russian.

In a recorded conversation between Mustafa Kaplan, one of the leaders of the Tahşiyeciler group, and a suspect named Ünal Türkal on Aug. 28, 2009, Kaplan tells Türkal that the group sees all other religious groups in Turkey as “infidels” and approves terrorist activities in Iraq and Russia. In a search conducted during police raids on the premises of the suspects in 2010, police seized a 28-page booklet titled “Reddul-Evham 5,” a text that says Islam approves of suicide bombings and the killing of wives and children of non-believers. A handwritten 35-page document that was also seized from Kaplan’s home in İstanbul’s Bağcılar district said Islam sanctioned the killings of Muslims who were used as shields by non-believers.

The prosecutor also included video footage aired on the CNN Türk and Habertürk national networks on January 2010 and March 2010 in which Doğan can be heard calling his followers to armed jihad. Doğan also said in his videotaped sermons that the head of the Turkish government and the head of the Religious Affairs Directorate are foreigners and should be killed in an armed attack.

“I’m saying go build arms and kill [them],” he instructs followers in the video, continuing, “If the sword is not used, then this is not Islam.”

He can also be heard asking his followers to build bombs and mortars in their homes, claiming that Islam allows for such practices. Doğan said Egypt, India, Iran, Syria, Pakistan and Turkey are not governed by Shariah law and predicts that they will soon be wiped out.

In the video, Doğan says: “If an army [al-Qaeda] shows up in Afghanistan and that army calls on you [to join its ranks], you should join that war [jihad] even if you can only crawl.”

In the search of Doğan’s apartment in İstanbul’s Güngören district and a farm compound in Muratgören village in the southeastern province of Muş, police found a huge cache of literature and CDs that featured Osama bin Laden’s speeches, video footage showing how to design mortar shells in a makeshift setting and lay improvised explosive devices (IEDs) and a propaganda film for al-Qaeda.

According to the indictment, Doğan was described as a “radical who harbors pro al-Qaeda views,” further stating that he organized the group according to al-Qaeda’s global jihad ideology. In literature prepared by the group, Doğan told his followers: “We do not have enough power for an armed fight yet. We have to defer the obligatory jihad until we gain enough strength. But once we do attain enough power, we’ll show how jihad can be conducted.”

Tahşiyeciler thought they were preparing for the prophecy of the coming mehdi (messiah), which they expected would be fulfilled in 2012. When that day came, they planned to join the mehdi’s army, which they believed was being led by Osama bin Laden, who fought against the US, thereby preparing the ground for his coming. They also believed that an army would come out of Afghanistan carrying a black flag — a symbol nowadays often used by extremist organizations such as al-Qaeda, al-Shabaab and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).

Among the evidence collected by police and included in the prosecutor’s indictment are documents about an al-Qaeda leader, video footage regarding the 9/11 attacks and religious literature justifying the attacks on the World Trade Center in New York.

In the wiretaps, Doğan was recorded warning militants in the group about surveillance, saying that they should watch what they say over the phone because the National Intelligence Organization (MİT) was monitoring their phone calls. Doğan’s suspicions were accurate as the daily Millet revealed last week that Turkey’s intelligence agency told the police about Tahşiyeciler’s activities in 2008.

According to the article, MİT issued a circular to police departments in 12 provinces that detailed the dangerous activities of Tahşiyeciler. The letter, marked as confidential and including the still-pending case file against Tahşiyeciler, was dated Dec. 3, 2008. The circular described the group as having some 5,000 members and identified Doğan, also known as Molla Muhammed, as the group leader who was exploiting religion.

MİT sent further intelligence about the group on Feb. 17 and March 30, 2009 to the police. The Counterterrorism Unit of the İstanbul Police Department forwarded the case file, with all the collected information about the group, to the prosecutor’s office. The prosecutor then ordered a judicial investigation into Tahşiyeciler that led to raids on safe houses used by the group on Jan. 22, 2010.

Three hand grenades were found in safe houses used by Tahşiyeciler in İstanbul’s Bahçelievler district that could be traced back to manufacturing plants in Turkey, Germany and Russia. During forensic examination, the serial numbers were found to be intact but the batch number of the shipment was filed off, making it difficult to determine the shipment’s destination. Electronic parts, cables and switches were also found, along with 673 rifle bullets and 28 handgun bullets during raids. In the houses used by the suspects in Niğde province, police discovered unlicensed handguns and rifles, in addition to ammunition.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Al Qaeda, annotators, Azerbaijan, Germany, Russia, Tahşiyeciler, Turkey

Record 17,000 join ‘Pinstripe Nazi’ anti-Islam march in Germany

December 23, 2014 By administrator

Agence France-Presse in Berlin

Anti-muslem-germanyMany in Berlin shocked by emergence of far-right anti-Islamist group Pegida as growing numbers join weekly Dresden protest

A record 17,000 people have joined the latest in a string of demonstrations against Islam in Dresden, eastern Germany, celebrating the rise of their far-right populist movement by singing Christmas carols.

The march on Monday night was organised by Patriotic Europeans Against Islamisation of the West – a group that has grown rapidly since its first protest in October.

Politicians from all major parties have been stunned by the emergence of the right-wing nationalists who vent their anger against what they consider a broken immigration and asylum system.

About 4,500 counter-demonstrators marched through the city under the slogan “Dresden Nazi-free”, warning that there was no space for racism and xenophobia in the country that perpetrated the Holocaust.

Most Pegida followers insist they are not Nazis but patriots who worry about the “watering down” of their Christian-rooted culture and traditions. They often accuse mainstream political parties of betraying them and the media of lying.

Braving cold and wet weather, they gathered outside the historic Semperoper concert hall for their pre-Christmas recital. Police put their numbers at about 17,500, up from the previous high of 15,000 a week earlier.

The management of the opera house signalled its distaste by turning the building’s lights off and flying flags outside that read: “Open your eyes”, “Open your hearts”, “Open doors” and “Human dignity is sacrosanct”, the first line of the national constitution.

The Protestant bishop of Saxony state, Jochen Bohl, said the Pegida followers, by singing Christmas carols, were seeking “to exploit a Christian symbol and a Christian tradition” for political purposes, German news agency DPA reported.

Former German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, of the centre-left Social Democrats, called for concerned citizens to launch a “rebellion of the decent” against the anti-foreigner movement, saying “that’s the kind of public reaction we need now”.

Pegida, born in a city that was part of communist East Germany until the fall of the Berlin Wall 25 years ago, has spawned copycat groups in western areas which have failed so far to attract similar crowds.

Smaller clone groups rallied Monday in the western cities of Bonn, Kassel and Wuerzburg, but they only drew up to 200 followers each and were all vastly outnumbered by counter-demonstrations that drew 20,000 nationwide.

Police reported no major violence but said eight people were temporarily detained after confrontations in Kassel, reported German news agency DPA.

The biggest anti-Pegida march was held in the southern city of Munich, where at least 12,000 rallied under the banner “Make space – Refugees are welcome”.

“We have space for people of different skin colour, ethnic origin and mother tongue,” city mayor Dieter Reiter told the crowd.

“We have space for all religions and believers: for those who go to the mosque on Fridays, who go to the synagogue on Saturdays, or to church on Sundays, but also for those who prefer to just stay home.”

The movement has emerged at a time when Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, has become the continent’s top destination for asylum seekers, and the world’s number two destination for migrants after the United States.

The influx of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and several African and Balkan countries has strained local governments, which have scrambled to house the newcomers in old schools, office blocks and army barracks.

Chancellor Angela Merkel has cautioned Germans against falling prey to any form of xenophobic “rabble-rousing”, while other lawmakers have deplored the new “pin-striped Nazis”.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-islam, Germany, march, Nazi

3 Turkish men arrested in Germany over spying charges

December 19, 2014 By administrator

186400German prosecutors said Thursday, Dec 18 that they had arrested three Turkish men accused of spying on compatriots in Germany for Turkish intelligence, but Ankara denied that the suspects were linked to the National Intelligence Organization (MİT), Hurriyet Daily News reported.

The federal prosecutor’s office said two of the suspects – identified in line with German privacy rules only as Muhammed Taha G. and Göksel G. – were arrested Wednesday at Frankfurt airport. The third, Ahmet Duran Y., was arrested at his home in western Germany.

Muhammed Taha G. is accused of handling the other two as agents, and they collected information for him on Turks in Germany as well as their “organizational structures,” prosecutors said in a statement.

They did not elaborate or say when the alleged spying took place, but said arrest warrants were issued on Nov 11.

The suspects were ordered to be remanded in custody pending a possible indictment.

Turkish security officials, who spoke to daily Hürriyet on condition of anonymity, said the three suspects had no links to MİT or the Prime Ministry. The same sources stressed that arrests came soon after media outlets affiliated to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) alleged that the Turkish Cooperation and Development Agency (TİKA) was being used by MİT to recruit agents in Germany. They also noted that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had recently slammed the European Union regarding a Dec 14 police operation on the Gülen community in Turkey, according to the HDN.

Germany is home to a large Turkish community.

In August, Turkey summoned Germany’s ambassador and demanded an explanation over a German magazine report that Germany’s foreign intelligence agency listed Turkey, a NATO ally, as a target for intelligence gathering.

German officials refused to confirm the report, the HDN says

Related links:

Hurriyet Daily News. Germany arrests three Turks accused of spying, Turkey denies involvement

Filed Under: News Tagged With: arrested, Germany, men, spaying, Turkish

15,000 join anti-Islam protest in eastern Germany

December 16, 2014 By administrator

By Frank Zeller AFP

germany-demo-against-islamDresden (Germany) (AFP) – A record 15,000 people marched Monday in eastern Germany against “asylum cheats” and the country’s “Islamisation” in the latest show of strength of a growing far-right populist movement.

Chancellor Angela Merkel earlier cautioned Germans against falling prey to xenophobic “rabble-rousing”, reacting to the nascent movement called “Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident” or PEGIDA.

“The people are with us!,” the group’s founder Lutz Bachmann shouted at the crowd, celebrating a 50-percent rise in attendance since their last “Monday demonstration” in a series of rallies that started only in October.

“Everywhere now, in every news rag, on every senseless talkshow, they are debating, and the most important thing is: the politicians can no longer ignore us!” Bachmann told the mass of people, many waving the black-red-gold national flag.

“We have shown by taking another ‘little stroll’, and by growing in numbers, that we’re on the right path, and that slowly, very slowly, something is beginning to change in this country,” Bachmann bellowed to loud cheers.

– ‘We are the people’ –

Since the protests have rapidly grown in size and spawned smaller clones in half a dozen cities, a debate about immigration and refugees has gripped Germany, a country whose Nazi past makes expressions of xenophobia especially troubling.

Politicians have been stunned by the emergence in the city of Dresden of the nationalists who march against what they consider a broken immigration and asylum system and who vent deep anger at the political class and mainstream media.

The demonstrations have flared at a time when Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, has become the continent’s top destination for asylum seekers, and the world’s number two destination for migrants after the United States.

The influx of refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and several African and Balkan countries has strained local governments, which have scrambled to house the newcomers in old schools, office blocks and army barracks.

One demonstrator, Michael Stuerzenberger, said he does not oppose asylum for refugees but asserted that “70 percent of people claiming political asylum here are economic refugees. We don’t want to stay silent about this anymore.”

“We don’t want a flood of asylum seekers, we don’t want Islamisation. We want to keep our country with our values. Is that so terrible? Does that make us Nazis? Is it a crime to be a patriot?”

While several known neo-Nazis have been spotted in the PEGIDA crowds, the rallies have been dominated not by jackbooted men with shorn heads but by disenchanted citizens who voice a string of grievances.

“We are the people,” they chanted, co-opting the phrase famously shouted a quarter-century ago by East German pro-democracy protesters here in the lead-up to the fall of the Berlin Wall.

– ‘Repugnant and abhorrent’ –

Justice Minister Heiko Maas said the marches “bring shame” on the country, and that Germany is experiencing an “escalation of agitation against immigrants and refugees”, a trend he labelled “repugnant and abhorrent”.

The leader of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, Aiman Mazyek, warned that PEGIDA could split German society and that their use of the chant “we are the people” sought to divide “you, the bad Muslims, and us, the good Germans”.

Speaking with AFP, he also blamed politicians and the media for mainly speaking about Islam and Muslims “in the context of security, threats and danger” in recent years.

More than 1,200 police kept a close watch on the non-violent crowd and on about 6,000 counter-protesters nearby marching under the banners “Dresden Nazi-free” and “Dresden for All”, organised by civic, political and church groups.

Most protesters claimed they are not neo-Nazis, just patriots.

“To call these people sick with fear, Islamophobic, is outrageous,” said an Austrian protester, Lana Gabriel, in her 40s. “They are not far-right. They just love the country and its traditions.”

Several conservative politicians have argued the government must “listen” to the people’s concerns about immigration, while the small anti-euro AfD party has openly sympathised with PEGIDA, saying its message has struck a chord.

Polls suggest the eurosceptic party has found a new campaign issue.

A survey for news website Zeit Online showed that nearly half of all Germans — 49 percent — sympathised with PEGIDA’s stated concerns and 30 percent indicated they “fully” backed the protests’ aims.

Almost three in four — 73 percent — said they worried that “radical Islam” was gaining ground and 59 percent said Germany accepted too many asylum seekers.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: anti-islam, Germany

The German ambassador in Yerevan calls for recognition of the Armenian genocide by Turkey

October 31, 2014 By administrator

arton104842-307x210Ambassadors of Great Britain and Germany in Armenia, Catherine Leach and Reiner Morell, held a press conference Wednesday, October 29 in Yerevan in particular to expose their preparations for the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the First World War. Entitled “100 years after the First World War,” the program of events organized jointly sign of reconciliation includes visits to schools, the symbolic planting

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: calls, Genocide, Germany, Recognition, Turkey, UK

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