Germany 'Islamisation' protests denounced

Politicians and celebrities in Germany have denounced an anti-Islam demonstration that has drawn thousands of people.

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Participants of right-wing initiative PEGIDA (Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the Occident) rally in Munich, Germany, 05 January 2015. Counterdemonstrations against racism and xenophobia have been planned in Dresden, Berlin, Cologne and Stuttgart. (EPA/ANDREAS GEBERT)

German political leaders, entertainers and sports stars have thrown their weight into the growing backlash against a new anti-immigration movement, leading calls to defend the country's hard-won image for tolerance.

A day after tens of thousands again took to the streets in several cities to rally for and against a new group which opposes what it claims is the Islamisation of Europe, 50 prominent figures issued statements in a two-page spread in the Bild daily to push back.

In its latest show of strength, Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident, or PEGIDA, drew some 18,000 people to a demonstration Monday in its hub city of Dresden in the former communist east.

Its sudden emergence over just a few weeks and the regular staging of marches have sparked offshoot protests elsewhere, but also a counter-movement accusing PEGIDA of whipping up xenophobia.

"PEGIDA is not only damaging our country, it is also presenting a poor image of Germany," warned Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier, one of the 50 figures writing in Bild.

Ex-chancellor Helmut Schmidt, a still-influential elder statesman, said the PEGIDA protests pandered to "hollow prejudices, xenophobia and intolerance".

"But that is not Germany," he added, while Germany's national football team manager Oliver Bierhoff noted the 2014 World Cup winning squad had included many players with migrant family backgrounds.

News website Spiegel Online meanwhile devoted its top story to international media coverage of the anti-Islam movement.

Chancellor Angela Merkel urged people in her New Year's address to spurn the protests, whose leaders, she said, often had "prejudice, coldness, even hatred in their hearts".

Thousands meanwhile joined counter-protests Monday in cities such as Berlin, Stuttgart and Cologne, carrying placards such as one that read "Disgrace For Our Country". Numbers at some demonstrations far outnumbered PEGIDA's supporters.

Amid a record influx of asylum seekers from countries stricken by war and poverty, Germany, like several of its European peers, faces a heated immigration debate, with some areas of the country grappling to cope with new arrivals.

Germany is home to about three million people of Turkish descent, while fighting in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria has caused a surge of refugees to the country in the past few years.

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Source: AAP



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