Berlin: Former minister calls to stop Muslim immigration

Berlin: Former minister calls to stop Muslim immigration


Germany's Turkish community expressed indignation on Thursday over derogatory comments by Thilo Sarrazin, an outspoken board member of the German central bank, or Bundesbank.


Sarrazin, 64, had said in an interview that many of Berlin's Turkish and Arab population were 'unwilling, and unable to integrate,' and worsened conditions in the German capital.


'This is outrageous,' said Kenan Kolat, who heads the Turkish Association in Germany.


'Sarrazin often overshoots the mark and gives no thought to the consequences of his statements,' Kolat told German Press Agency dpa.


'A large number of Arabs and Turks in this city, whose number has grown through bad policies, have no productive function other than as fruit and vegetable vendors,' Sarrazin told the culture magazine Lettre International.


'Forty per cent of all births occur in the underclasses,' Sarrazin said of Berlin, adding that this was dragging down standards of education.


'Our educated population is becoming stupider from generation to generation,' the former politician added.


While migrant families from East European, Vietnamese, Chinese and Indian backgrounds had integrated within a generation, Sarrazin said the children and even grandchildren of Turkish and Arab immigrants failed to learn decent German and did badly at school.


The Turkish-German Employers' Association and the regional Turkish Association for Berlin-Brandenburg rejected Sarrazin's remarks.


'This is absolutely below the belt line and the content is absolute rubbish,' said Safter Cinar of the regional Turkish Association.


Sarrazin, who was Berlin's finance minister until he joined the Bundesbank earlier this year, said 70 per cent of Turks and 90 per cent of the Arabic population rejected the German state.


'The solution to this problem can only be: no more moving (to Berlin), and those who want to marry should do so abroad,' Sarrazin added.


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Source: Monsters and Critics (English), h/t Turkish Digest

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