German Chancellor Angela
Merkel called for the prohibition in some situations
of the full facial veil, toughening her rhetoric
toward Muslim immigrants as she sought to shore
up her party’s conservative
flank at its annual
convention on Tuesday.
“We show our face in interpersonal
communication,” Ms. Merkel told delegates of her
Christian Democratic Union party to some of the
strongest applause of her more than hourlong
speech.
“Because of this, the full veil is
unacceptable for us. It should be banned wherever
legally possible.”
Ms. Merkel also said that German law superseded
Islamic law, or Shariah, in a nod to criticism that
her policy of accepting refugees had undermined
the rule of law in the country.
Some 890,000
asylum seekers arrived in Germany last year,
largely from Muslim countries, as Ms. Merkel
refused to close the country’s borders to refugees.
Ms. Merkel’s tougher rhetoric doesn’t necessarily
herald a change in policy. In September, she said
that a ban on burqas would be appropriate in
certain situations such as in courtrooms or the civil
service, but wearing the veil was generally
protected by the constitutional guarantee of
freedom of religion.
The convention speech amounted to Ms. Merkel’s
road map to fighting populism as her center-right
party enters an election year that she said would be
the most difficult since German reunification.
Ms. Merkel repeated her promise that last year’s
chaotic wave of migration to Germany wouldn’t
repeat. The detention of a 17-year-old Afghan
asylum-seeker on suspicion of raping and
murdering a university student in Freiburg, and
the detention of a 31-year-old Iraqi asylum-seeker
for two alleged sex crimes against students in
Bochum, have inflamed the immigration debate in
recent days.
In next September’s general election, Ms. Merkel
will run for a fourth term as chancellor and will
face the strongest right-wing populist party , the
Alternative for Germany, or AfD, in the country’s
postwar history.
The Christian Democrats still hold a wide lead in
the polls, and the upstart, anti-immigrant AfD has
virtually no chance of entering government next
year. But the party’s rise has made Christian
Democrats nervous because it has attracted past
supporters of Ms. Merkel who are upset by her
refugee policy and could complicate her ability to
form a new government next year.
The internal discord was reflected in Ms. Merkel’s
less-than-unanimous reelection as party
chairwoman. About 89.5% of the party delegates
voted for her on Tuesday, compared to 96.7% at
the previous election, in 2014.
Ms. Merkel exhorted her colleagues to avoid
divisive rhetoric and defended European
integration.
“In this situation in which the world has come out
of joint, we must first do everything to make sure
that Europe doesn’t come out of its crises even
weaker than how it entered them,” Ms. Merkel
said. “We must do this deeply in our own interest,
since Germany will do well in the long term only
when Europe also does well.”
The anti-establishment mood sweeping Europe has
rattled Ms. Merkel, the European Union’s most
influential politician and a staunch defender of
liberal values and international institutions. The
latest blow came on Sunday, when Italian voters
rejected Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s proposed
constitutional changes.
Ms. Merkel said that managing the consequences of
the digital revolution and globalization was one of
the party’s main challenges, casting the rise of
populism in the West as a by-product of those
economic changes. She said financial-market
regulation needed to be improved and tax
loopholes for global corporations removed.
While some people benefited from the modern
economy, she said, others feared losing their jobs
and that things were changing too fast.
“Some blame the liberal, constitutional state for all
of this and fight against its values,” Ms. Merkel
said. To defend liberal society, she said, politicians
had to show that “hard work will still pay off, today
and in the future.”
Source:WWW.WSJ.COM

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