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Sex mob bad for refugees

Bernd Riegert
Bernd Riegert
January 9, 2016

The violent New Year's Eve attacks in Cologne are grist to the mill for EU hardliners. Now, Brussels will be even more inhospitable towards Angela Merkel's refugee policies, says DW's Bernd Riegert.

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Köln Pegida rechte Demonstranten
Image: Reuters/W.Rattay

Until New Year's Eve in Cologne, consensus on European refugee policy seemed very unlikely. Now, in the wake of massive attacks against women by a large horde of men, a large number of whom were asylum seekers, and compounded by the flagrant inability of the police to do anything about the attacks, agreement on a reasonable plan for distributing refugees throughout the EU has become entirely impossible. Reactions to the "Sex-Mob" in Cologne, especially those voiced in Eastern Europe, left no room for interpretation. The upshot of statements from Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Slovakia: Refugees, especially Muslims, are dangerous. We have been saying that all along, but "Multi-Culti" Chancellor Angela Merkel didn't want to hear it.

Slovakia spearheads the movement against Merkel

The chancellor can now forget her call for the longterm regulation of distributing refugees across Europe in an equitable fashion rather than on a volunteer basis. Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico does not want to allow Muslim refugees into his country. He seeks to defend against the forced distribution of refugees with every means necessary. He has already filed a complaint against quotas with the European Court of Justice (ECJ) in Luxembourg. The offenses in Cologne, Hamburg, Stuttgart, and now Helsinki, have given Fico all the arguments he needs.

The Czech president, the new ultra-conservative Polish government, the Hungarian prime minister and others in Eastern and Southern Europe will agree with Fico wholeheartedly. And not only them, xenophobic right-wing populist Geert Wilders of the Netherlands has damned EU asylum policy lock, stock and barrel. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, currently President of the EU Council of Ministers, is under increasing pressure. Similar scenarios are playing out in other countries as well: In Denmark, Sweden, Finland, and now also in Germany, pressure is mounting on ruling governments.

Deutsche Welle Bernd Riegert
DW's Bernd Riegert

Cologne is even being greedily cited beyond Europe's shores: The Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump did not hesitate to use the incident for his own political gain. "Germany is going through massive attacks to its people by the migrants allowed to enter the country," tweeted Trump, who wants to seal the USA's borders.

Domestic pressure on Merkel

The right-wing populist party Alternative for Germany (AfD) and other groups demonstrating against the Islamization of Europe now seem to have the upper hand. The number of anti-immigrant attacks against asylum centers has never been higher in Germany. As a result, the chancellor is under increasing pressure domestically - and now, in the aftershock of Cologne, it seems that her plan for a common European refugee policy has been dealt a fatal blow.

The concept of distributing large influxes of people from Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Eritrea and North Africa throughout the EU depends greatly on the rules of the Schengen area. Without an orderly distribution, initial entry point states, like Greece and Italy, will simply continue to flag through refugees. And no country along the Balkan route will stop or detain them. So people will continue to stream into Germany. The "decisive" reduction in the number of immigrants that Chancellor Merkel promised members of her unruly Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union (CSU), will not happen. She can no longer count on European solidarity.

Merkel now has the majority of the EU against her

Robert Fico will no doubt stick to his hard line at least until March, when he hopes to be reconfirmed as head of government in upcoming national elections. And, as fate would have it, Fico would then take over the presidency of the EU Council of Ministers in July. In that position he will be tasked with finding compromise on European refugee and border security policy. That will, of course, be a non-starter, as Slovakia is currently suing the majority of EU member states over that same policy. Meanwhile, many heads of state and government think that the German chancellor's stance in the refugee crisis is misguided. Most likely she will have to change it, or step down.

The shocking events in Cologne have made the already difficult situation within the EU utterly untenable. They could also be the beginning of the end for Europe's once so powerful Angela Merkel.

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Bernd Riegert
Bernd Riegert Senior European correspondent in Brussels with a focus on people and politics in the European Union