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Opinion
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Taking on the far right
By K.V.Krishnaswamy
BERLIN: The centrist government in Germany, led by the Social
Democrat, Mr Gerhard Schroeder, has decided to seek judicial
sanction for banning an ultra right party. The step is a candid
acknowledgement of deepening concern over xenophobia, the most
serious problem faced by the democratic polity since the two
halves of the country were re-united more than a decade ago, and
comes on the heels of the revelation that there has been an
increase of nearly nine per cent in right-wing extremist crimes
in the last nine months compared to the previous year. Neo-Nazis
have taken out rallies in the past two weeks to protest against
the government plans for imposing the ban.
There was a rude reminder of the persisting problem of right-wing
extremism targetted at foreigners during the low-key celebrations
to mark the tenth anniversary of reunification in early October.
A firebomb attack on a synagogue in Dusseldorf in the former
western half had marred the observances, though there were no
casualties. In summer the city witnessed a bomb attack on
immigrants.
The targets were clear in both attacks: the Jewish community, the
old enemy, and the immigrant who had been invited to come as
guest worker in the Sixties and Seventies and now finds himself
unwanted by some sections of the population and up against
insurmountable obstacles to claiming citizenship that should have
been his due long ago. Xenophobia, hatred of foreigners, and
anti-semitism, hatred of the Jew, are old diseases. The dilemma
for Germany is that the country depends more, not less, on
immigrant labour to keep up its high standard of living, for the
impoverished foreigner to mind the jobs that the German will not
care to do himself.
Acutely sensitive issue
The country has tried several palliatives. The proposed ban on
the NPD (German acronym for the National Democratic Party of
Germany), for instance, has been in debate for some months. Such
bans had in earlier decades been imposed on both right-wing and
left-wing groupings and are perhaps not the most effective of
solutions but the move certainly signals the resolve of the
Schroeder government to face up to the challenge of the
worrisomely rising tide of neo-Nazi extremism. It is an acutely
sensitive issue in a country that is struggling still to bury the
ghost of Adolf Hitler and the catastrophic consequences of his
``final solution.''
Any visitor reading the German press will realise instantly that
there certainly is no effort to brush the issue under the carpet.
On the contrary, there is evident a sincere effort to come to
grips with the problem.
The German parliament has just released more funds for what is
officially described as the programme to ``reinforce the fight
against right-wing extremism.'' In the new budget there will be
more money allotted to the Ministries for Families and the
Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, a German
(also European?) euphemism for the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
Mr. Schroeder has personally led his Government's strong public
crusade against the extreme right, visiting victims of violence
and vowing to put down neo-Nazi elements. In the battle against
xenophobic brutality, his broad plan has three prongs: a zero
tolerance crackdown by police and the courts, youth programmes
that offer alternative activities in the post- unification era
(in place of the free leisure time opportunities available during
the time of the German Democratic Republic) and appeals to
Germans for civil courage to confront neo-Nazism and anti-
foreigner racism.
Officials and parliamentarians belonging to the ruling coalition
never cease to point out that most of the criminal attacks by
right-wing extremists have taken place in the former communist
half and trace the malady primarily to the absence of a
democratic culture of tolerance in that half for the better part
of half a century. One official even included the years under
Adolf Hitler to make it six decades of authoritarian regimes.
Unconvincing explanations
The elaborate explanations they offer, however, sound rather
unconvincing, considering that parties like the NPD have their
roots in the former western wing. Besides, with more foreigners
in the west than the east, it may be wrong to assume that there
is more xenophobia in the former communist land. One possible
explanation offered is that symbols of authority such as the
parent, teacher and policeman disappeared with the collapse of
the GDR and are taking time to re-assert themselves.
Officials at the Interior Ministry in their comments in fact
reflected feelings of frustration at the alleged slowness of East
Germany to recover. These were an echo of complaints one heard in
West Germany at the time of reunification when West Germans often
insensitively accused their eastern countrymen of being work-shy,
of having lost the German virtues of discipline and initiative.
The slowness of economic recovery in the eastern wing, despite
massive infusion of capital from the western half, is blamed for
the resurgence of right extremist crime, with the frustrated
youth turning their anger at the immigrants who may have made it
good. The annual report of the Interior Ministry for 1999 had
this revealing statistic: on an average, the rate of acts of
violence per 100,000 inhabitants was 2.19 in east Germany and
0.68 in the west German state.''
That there is widespread resentment in the eastern wing with the
``overbearing'' attitude of the westerner is an altogether
different matter.
There can be no facile explanation in fact for such brutality by
youth in the post-unification era which has seen much marked
progress all round. The rise of the far right groups defies
logic, with official explanations contradicted by social workers
who have been working especially among the immigrant communities,
mostly Turkish.
The far right has no doubt many manifestations and running
through them is this common thread that spawns the racial hatred:
all abhor democratic values, worship resort to violence and have
no particular attachment to human and civil rights. But these
groups are a miniscule minority with a disproportionately high
potential for havoc. The fight against these forces is a
concerted national effort, led by the Social Democrat-Green
coalition.
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