Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge

Syrian doctor Humam Razok poses for a picture in Soemmerda, Germany, on Sept. 03, 2024. (Reuters)
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Updated 04 September 2024
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Far-right’s victory in German state election puts migrants on edge

  • Razok, 39, fears racism will worsen in Thuringia even if the Alternative for Germany is unlikely to be able to form a government
  • “It’s like having a huge mole on your face as you walk down the street — people look at you in a strange way”

BERLIN: Syrian doctor Humam Razok felt relief when he arrived in Germany nine years ago after fleeing Damascus, where he had been jailed twice for his political beliefs.
But the far-right AfD party’s victory in an election on Sunday in the eastern state of Thuringia where he lives, and the daily racism he says his wife encounters, have convinced him to leave the state once she graduates.
Razok, 39, fears racism will worsen in Thuringia even if the Alternative for Germany is unlikely to be able to form a government because other parties refuse to work with it.
“It’s like having a huge mole on your face as you walk down the street — people look at you in a strange way. We are still seen as new or unfamiliar to them,” Razok said.
He was one of more than 10 migrants Reuters spoke to in Thuringia. All shared experiences of racism and said they were anxious about the rise of the far-right.
The nationalist, anti-migrant AfD won nearly 33 percent of votes in Thuringia and came a close second, with over 30 percent of votes, in neighboring Saxony. It is the first far-right party to win a state legislature election in Germany since World War Two.
Razok quickly learned German following his arrival from Syria, and works as an anaesthetist at a hospital near the state capital of Erfurt. He says he is respected by patients and is satisfied with the atmosphere at work but that his wife, who wears a headscarf, faces racism every day.
“I am very careful on the street. If I speak Arabic with my wife, I try to keep it down or switch to German if someone is close by,” Razok said.
He said he was not surprised by the AfD’s election success but was disappointed, and that its rise had emboldened some of his work colleagues to openly voice support for the party.
Other migrants he knows in Thuringia, where foreigners make up 7.6 percent of the population, are also afraid, Razok said.
“Only a minority (of them) still want to live here,” he said, adding that he plans to move to one of Germany’s western states once his wife graduates as a pharmacist.
Skilled workers are desperately needed in Thuringia, where more than three in four health care vacancies could not be filled with a suitable applicant within a year, according to data compiled by the IAB labor market research institute.
If this trend continues, it could exacerbate the labor shortage in Thuringia, where the number of employed people is expected to shrink by about 20 percent by 2040, twice the national average, according to a study by the Bertelsmann Foundation.

MIGRATION TRAUMA
Nearly half the people who voted in Thuringia supported either the AfD or the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW), which also called for tighter asylum policies and won 15.8 percent of votes.
German Finance Minister Christian Lindner blamed the outcome on the federal government’s migration policy, saying Germans were fed up with the fact that the government may have lost control of immigration and asylum.
A deadly attack by a Syrian asylum seeker in the western city of Solingen a week earlier had intensified voters’ concerns about unregulated migration, said Hermann Binkert, head of the German Institute for New Social Answers (INSA).
“Also, there is still a bit of that trauma from 2015,” he said, referring to the impact of former Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision in 2015 to allow over a million asylum seekers to cross the border into Germany.
The Solingen attack prompted Germany’s federal government to introduce measures to tighten asylum policies and accelerate deportations.
The arrival of refugees fleeing war in Ukraine and a rise in asylum applications in 2023 have also fueled public debate on migration, said Zeynep Yanaşmayan-Wegele, a researcher at the German Center for Integration and Migration Research (DeZIM).
She said social problems, such as a lack of affordable housing and labor shortages, were often oversimplified by politicians and wrongly attributed to migration, making it very difficult to “depoliticize” the topic.

HATE CRIMES
Hate crimes surged nearly 50 percent in Germany to 17,007 cases in 2023, according to data released by the Federal Criminal Police Office, which put the rise down largely to a rise in xenophobic offenses which it said were mostly linked to right-wing extremism.
Yara Mayassah, an integration social worker in Erfurt, attributes the AfD’s rise to what she sees as the wrong focus in Germany’s integration policies.
“It’s an awareness problem. Since we arrived in Germany, all initiatives have focused on educating and raising awareness among migrants. But we’ve never worked on raising the awareness of the host community,” Mayassah said.
Ali Hwajeh, 28, a psychology student in Thuringia, said he feared the AfD’s success would embolden its supporters to physically attack refugees.
“I’ll stay for now and see how things develop. If the situation worsens — if there’s aggression, if people get injured— then my decision might change,” he said.


Refugee firefighters in Mauritania battle bushfires to give back to the community that took them in

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Refugee firefighters in Mauritania battle bushfires to give back to the community that took them in

MBERA: The men move in rhythm, swaying in line and beating the ground with spindly tree branches as the sun sets over the barren and hostile Mauritanian desert. The crack of the wood against dry grass lands in unison, a technique perfected by more than a decade of fighting bushfires.
There is no fire today but the men — volunteer firefighters backed by the UN refugee agency — keep on training.
In this region of West Africa, bushfires are deadly. They can break out in the blink of an eye and last for days. The impoverished, vast territory is shared by Mauritanians and more than 250,000 refugees from neighboring Mali, who rely on the scarce vegetation to feed their livestock.
For the refugee firefighters, battling the blazes is a way of giving back to the community that took them in when they fled violence and instability at home in Mali.
Newcomers with an old tradition
Hantam Ag Ahmedou was 11 years old when his family left Mali in 2012 to settle in the Mbera refugee camp in Mauritania, 48 kilometers (30 miles) from the Malian border. Like most refugees and locals, his family are herders and once in Mbera, they saw how quickly bushfires spread and how devastating they can be.
“We said to ourselves: There is this amazing generosity of the host community. These people share with us everything they have,” he told The Associated Press. “We needed to do something to lessen the burden.”
His father started organizing volunteer firefighters, at the time around 200 refugees. The Mauritanians had been fighting bushfires for decades, Ag Ahmedou said, but the Malian refugees brought know-how that gave them an advantage.
“You cannot stop bushfires with water,” Ag Ahmedou said. “That’s impossible, fires sometimes break out a hundred kilometers from the nearest water source.”
Instead they use tree branches, he said, to smother the fire.
“That’s the only way to do it,” he said.
The volunteer ‘brigade’
Since 2018, the firefighters have been under the patronage of the UNHCR. The European Union finances their training and equipment, as well as the clearing of firebreak strips to stop the fires from spreading. The volunteers today count over 360 refugees who work with the region’s authorities and firefighters.
When a bushfire breaks out and the alert comes in, the firefighters jump into their pickup trucks and drive out. Once at the site of a fire, a 20-member team spreads out and starts pounding the ground at the edge of the blaze with acacia branches — a rare tree that has a high resistance to heat.
Usually, three other teams stand by in case the first team needs replacing.
Ag Ahmedou started going out with the firefighters when he was 13, carrying water and food supplies for the men. He helped put out his first fire when he was 18, and has since beaten hundreds of blazes.
He knows how dangerous the task is but he doesn’t let the fear control him.
“Someone has to do it,” he said. “If the fire is not stopped, it can penetrate the refugee camp and the villages, kill animals, kill humans, and devastate the economy of the whole region.”
A climate-vulnerable nation
About 90 percent of Mauritania is covered by the Sahara Desert. Climate change has accelerated desertification and increased the pressure on natural resources, especially water, experts say. The United Nations says tensions between locals and refugees over grazing areas is a key threat to peace.
Tayyar Sukru Cansizoglu, the UNHCR chief in Mauritania, said that with the effects of climate change, even Mauritanians in the area cannot find enough grazing land for their own cows and goats — so a “single bushfire” becomes life-threatening for everyone.
When the first refugees arrived in 2012, authorities cleared a large chunk of land for the Mbera camp, which today has more than 150,000 Malian refugees. Another 150,000 live in villages scattered across the vast territory, sometimes outnumbering the locals 10 to one.
Chejna Abdallah, the mayor of the border town of Fassala, said because of “high pressure on natural resources, especially access to water,” tensions are rising between the locals and the Malians.
Giving back
Abderrahmane Maiga, a 52-year-old member of the “Mbera Fire Brigade,” as the firefighters call themselves, presses soil around a young seedling and carefully pours water at its base.
To make up for the vegetation losses, the firefighters have started setting up tree and plant nurseries across the desert — including acacias. This year, they also planted the first lemon and mango trees.
“It’s only right that we stand up to help people,” Maiga said.
He recalls one of the worst fires he faced in 2014, which dozens of men — both refugees and host community members — spent 48 hours battling. By the time it was over, some of the volunteers had collapsed from exhaustion.
Ag Ahmedou said he was aware of the tensions, especially as violence in Mali intensifies and going back is not an option for most of the refugees.
He said this was the life he was born into — a life in the desert, a life of food scarcity and “degraded land” — and that there is nowhere else for him to go. Fighting for survival is the only option.
“We cannot go to Europe and abandon our home,” he said. “So we have to resist. We have to fight.”