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Article: 28428 of soc.culture.german
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Newsgroups: soc.culture.german,soc.culture.europe,eunet.politics
Subject: SENIOR U.S. DIPLOMAT CRITISIZES GERMANY...
Message-ID: <1994Apr18.131959.1@ittpub.nl>
From: sinan@ittpub.nl
Date: 18 Apr 94 13:19:59 GMT
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*** U.S. DIPLOMAT CALLS GERMANY ''RACIST'' 4/14/94
By THOM SHANKER
Chicago Tribune
BERLIN -- One of the United States' most senior career
diplomats for Germany has described this nation as ''a
racist society'' and has echoed criticisms that Chancellor
Helmut Kohl's government has failed to provide the ''moral
leadership'' required to halt neo-Nazi violence.
Douglas Jones, in his last public address before
retiring, said Thursday that the Kohl government is to blame
for an environment in which minority civil rights are not
respected.
''Although Chancellor Kohl has unequivocally condemned
the anti-foreigner and anti-Semitic wave of violence, the
German media too have criticized his political strategy --
if it can be called that -- on the issue,'' Jones said.
Jones cited Kohl's refusal to visit survivors of
skinhead firebomb attacks and his statements that Germany
''is not a country of immigration'' -- both of which are
appeals to conservative voters.
''That would signal to me that the nearly 7 million
foreigners who live here legally do not belong here and that
I am justified in wanting them out,'' Jones said. ''And, to
be honest with you, this sentiment is by no means limited to
skinheads.''
His comments coincided with the release Thursday of
annual crime statistics showing that right-wing extremist
violence in Germany increased sharply in 1993.
The Interior Ministry said right-wing attacks on the
homeless or handicapped doubled to 300 last year. Felony
assaults on foreigners and Jews remained the same, at about
700 cases.
About 30 people have died in right-wing violence since
Germany reunified in 1990. Last year, there were 18 cases of
murder or attempted murder, which claimed eight lives. In
1992, there were 15 homicidal attacks and 17 people died.
Jones said this violence against ''victims of
convenience on the street'' suggests ''a deeper-seated
social alienation and a lack of civic solidarity'' in modern
Germany.
Jones, who is assistant chief of mission at the U.S.
Embassy in Bonn and principal officer of Berlin's embassy-
in-waiting, spent his life specializing in German politics,
history and culture.
A Chicago native, he studied in Germany during high
school and college. His diplomatic resume in Germany also
includes minister-counsel for political affairs in Bonn and
consul general in Stuttgart.
His speech, delivered in German, was not cleared by the
State Department before its presentation at the Brandenburg
Institute of Memorial Sites, whose responsibilities include
preservation of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp north
of Berlin.
''I am not saying anything inconsistent with U.S.
foreign policy. The views of this administration -- of any
administration -- would be no different,'' Jones said before
his speech.
''If Germany is not a racist society, why is its
nationality law, which was written in 1913, predicated upon
race?'' he asked his audience. ''Public attitudes about
minority communities in Germany are ambivalent at best,
hostile at worst.''
He criticized the government for rejecting ''the concept
of a multicultural society as the standard'' and called on
Germany to resolve a situation in which ''there is virtually
no race-relations legislation. There is virtually no
immigration policy.''
Other worrisome trends identified by Jones include
significant financial support for Vladimir Zhirinovsky,
Russia's arch-nationalist, by German business and right-wing
organizations.
Jones said U.S. concerns ''about right-wing extremism in
Germany are an outgrowth of our friendship and commitment --
not a desire to dictate morality.''
And he took issue with a common belief here that foreign
news organizations, particularly U.S. ones, give
disproportionate coverage to rightist violence in Germany.
''Violence aimed at foreigners is important news, with a
unique historical resonance,'' Jones said.
Among encouraging signs cited by Jones is public outrage
expressed against right-wing violence, especially when
''hundreds of thousands of Germans have demonstrated in
solidarity with victims.''
He complimented Germany for its ''unambiguous support
for Israel and for survivors of the Holocaust,'' as well as
a policy of generosity for victims of the war in former
Yugoslavia.
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