German town bars asylum seekers from pool after harassment complaints

Male asylum seekers have been banned from a swimming pool in Germany after women complained after sexual harassment.

An interior view of an empty municipal swimming pool in Bornheim, Germany, 15 January 2016.

An interior view of an empty municipal swimming pool in Bornheim, Germany, 15 January 2016. Male asylum-seekers have been banned from a German municipal indoor swimming pool after incidents where women bathers complained of sexual harassment, town officials said 15 January. Source: EPA

A western German town has barred all adult male asylum seekers from its public indoor swimming pool after receiving complaints that some women were sexually harassed there.

It was the latest sign of social tensions related to the arrival last year of 1.1 million migrants in Germany, followed by sex assaults on women by young male asylum seekers and migrants during New Year's Eve celebrations in the city of Cologne.

The deputy mayor of Bornheim, a town of 48,000 some 30 km south of Cologne, said on Friday that a difficult decision was taken to send a clear message that breaching German cultural norms was a red line that should not be crossed.

"There have been complaints of sexual harassment and chatting-up going on in this swimming pool ... by groups of young men, and this has prompted some women to leave (the premises)," Markus Schnapka told Reuters.

"This led to my decision that adult males from our asylum shelters may not enter the swimming pool until further notice."

He did not say how the ban would be enforced. German media say asylum seekers, who get no funds from the state, must present an identification document to be admitted to pools at a discounted rate.

Schnapka said his town had begun a campaign in local asylum seekers' shelters to teach the occupants about gender equality and respect for women.

The gang attacks on women outside Cologne's historic cathedral on the Rhine river deepened public doubts about Chancellor Angela Merkel's open-door policy towards refugees fleeing conflicts in the Middle East and about Germany's ability to integrate the mainly Muslim and Arab newcomers.


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Source: AAP



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