Angela Merkel leads memorial of Solingen racist attack victims

German Chancellor Angela Merkel met with political leaders, including Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, on the 25th anniversary of a neo-Nazi arson attack that killed five members of a Turkish-German family.

German leaders gathered in Düsseldorf on Tuesday to honour the victims of the arson attack in the nearby community of Solingen on May 29, 1993, when right-wing extremists set fire to a home, killing five Turkish women and girls.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu travelled to Germany to attend the event alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel, members of the Turkish-German community and Mevlude Genc, survivor and family member of the victims.

Sitting: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu (right) alongside German Chancellor Angela Merkel (middle) and Mevlude Genc, survivor and family member of the victims, at the event, and Premier Armin Laschet of North Rhein-Westphalia (far left)  / Photo: Turkish Foreign Ministry

 

Chancellor Angela Merkel told those gathered that xenophobia, racism and anti-Semitism could have no place in Germany or anywhere else in the world. She spoke of her country’s responsibility in fighting against these ills, given its history with the Nazi Holocaust.

Merkel thanked Genc for “responding with great humanity” to what was an “inhumane act.” The chancellor also expressed her wish for “those who come to Germany to feel safe and at home.”

Mevlude Genc, who lost two daughters, two granddaughters and a niece in the arson attack, has been outspoken in support of reconciliation and peaceful coexistence in the aftermath of the tragedy.

At the ceremony in Düsseldorf, Genc spoke of the great grief she still feels today and said that “hate must be stopped.” The 54 year-old said that she had no feelings of revenge or hatred towards anyone, except for the perpetrators that had “turned her home into a grave.”

Concerns about xenophobia today

The gathering was meant to reinforce the message of unity against xenophobia. The attack became synonymous with anti-Turkish and anti-refugee sentiments in Germany in the 1990s, but its impact still lingers on today.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas expressed concerns that Turks living in Germany still faced hostility.

“It is shameful that even today many who themselves or their parents and grandparents came to Germany from Turkey experience discrimination in their everyday lives,” Maas said to German media on Tuesday.

The Turkish Community in Germany (TGD) has called for a broad societal alliance to combat xenophobia. “Right-wing populist arguments are again dictating the public discourse about refugees and migration,” TGD chairman Gökay Sofuoglu said in Berlin.

The attackers were four young men from the community, who had neo-Nazi leanings. They were found guilty of murder and sentenced to prison. All served their sentences and have since been released.

jcg/rt (dpa, AP) / DW

Check Also

Germany: Protests against mass deportation plan of the AfD

Hundreds of thousands of people, including the Federal Chancellor and the Foreign Minister, took to …