BERLIN: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz vowed to step up deportations on Monday during a visit to Solingen, where a deadly mass stabbing linked to the Islamic State has emboldened the far-right opposition and stoked criticism of his governmentโs handling of migration.
โWe will have to do everything we can to ensure that those who cannot and are not allowed to stay in Germany are repatriated and deported,โ Scholz told reporters in the western
city, where he laid a flower at the scene of the crime.
โThis was terrorism, terrorism against us all,โ he added.
The attack, in which a 26-year-old suspected Islamic State member from Syria is accused of killing three people, has fuelled political tensions over asylum and deportation rules
ahead of three state elections next month.
Images: ISIS has released a purported video testimonial of the attacker allegedly responsible for a fatal knife attack targeting attendees at a diversity event in the German town of Solingen. pic.twitter.com/m74qCVwCPT
โ Evan Kohlmann (@IntelTweet) August 25, 2024
The militant Islamist group claimed responsibility for the attack, which occurred on Friday evening during a festival celebrating Solingenโs 650-year history. Alongside the three killed, eight were injured, some seriously.
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which campaigns for a crackdown on migration, is leading in the polls in Saxony and Thuringia, where state elections are set for Sunday, and in Brandenburg, which has its election on September 22.
The AfD seized on the attack in its election campaign, with Thuringiaโs leading candidate for the party, Bjoern Hoecke, pitching to voters the choice of โHoecke or Solingenโ.
Opinion pollsters Stefan Merz of Infratest dimap and Manfred Guellner of Forsa told Reuters the attack would be unlikely to translate into more votes for the far-right party because its supporters had already been mobilised by migration issues.
Infratest dimapโs Merz cited the possibility that the centre-right CDU could benefit at the expense of Scholzโs centre-left Social Democrats.
BOTCHED DEPORTATION
The attack puts pressure on Scholz as his Social Democrats, alongside their Green and Free Democrat coalition partners, bruised from months of quarrelling, are trailing in the polls.
In a sign of tougher rhetoric, Scholz promised in October 2023 to ramp up deportations โbig styleโ โ a promise he repeated after his visit to the Solingen attack scene.
Again in June, Scholz said he would take a tougher stance on deportation after an Afghan man stabbed a police officer, who later died of his injuries, during an attack on a right-wing demonstration in the city of Mannheim.
Scholz said on Monday deportations had increased by some two thirds compared to 2021 levels. โBut that is no reason for us to sit back and relax,โ he added, saying the government was looking at legal and practical ways to boost the numbers.
Authorities had planned to deport the suspect in Fridayโs attack to Bulgaria last year under European Union asylum rules, according to German media. The deportation was unsuccessful
because the man had not been at his refugee accommodation when authorities tried to carry out the measure, the reports said.
A government spokesperson said the deportation plan had โfailed in practiceโ rather than on any legal basis.
(REUTERS)