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dbergh

11/27/24 9:46 PM

#503298 RE: fuagf #503271

As she flew home, she says, she was glad that NATO had avoided a big public fight. “But at the same time, it became obvious that we in NATO had no common strategy for dealing with Russia” — which many argue remains true to this day.





They needed to buy More Oil from Russia so Putin had More money to buy More and better military equipment

That is the Smart thing to do > But she F K ed that up To > Oh another M > Moron

Bison_7091

3 mo. ago

Germany has absolutely a huge issue with immigration, but not just since 2015. In 2015 I was immensely proud of how we opened our country to the refugees, but now I think it was a huge mistake.

Stabbing and rapes are a symptom of the actual issue. We have no infrastructure, we have no resources and that is due to a lack of training. I had Kurdish Iraqi friends who were in Germany since they were toddlers and they only had a connivance to stay in Germany. They can’t take jobs, not even job training with no permanent residency. I’ve met Syrian doctors and software engineers who were working for years at McDonald’s because STILL there’s no system in place to convert their education and give them opportunities to practice their jobs here. The refugees who come to seek help in our country have to sleep in the same rooms as the perpetrators from their own countries. They are locked in refugee camps, sometimes for years and unable to work.

Germany had enough time to step up and fix these problems but I think letting in refugees when we still haven’t actually integrated the refugees from the Lebanese civil war. And yes, it’s also an issue that some people who come here don’t have the best intentions but for f**ks sake what a huge disaster German immigration policies are will be studied in 100 years. It’s downright negligent and we should completely close our borders until we have fixed the system and are actually ready to protect and integrate these people.
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskGermany/comments/1ewodq5/is_immigration_really_a_problem_in_germany/
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fuagf

12/26/24 4:36 PM

#505762 RE: fuagf #503271

Authorities investigate Saudi doctor as suspect in Germany Christmas market attack

''Merkel Memoir Recalls What It Was Like Dealing With Trump and Putin"

By Thomas Escritt and Rachel More
December 22, 2024 8:33 AM GMT+11Updated 5 days ago

VIDEO

Summary

* Child among five dead, officials say
* Suspect arrested, identified as Saudi doctor
* Minister says suspect was Islamophobic, makes no comment on motive

MAGDEBURG, Germany, Dec 21 (Reuters) - Authorities investigated a Saudi doctor with a history of anti-Islam rhetoric as the suspected driver in a car-ramming attack on a Christmas market in the German city of Magdeburg that killed five people and injured scores.

The Friday evening attack on crowds gathered to celebrate the Christmas season could sharpen a fierce debate in Germany over security and immigration ahead of a national election in February, with opinion polls suggesting the far right will perform strongly.

Authorities said on Saturday the motive was not clear. However, the Magdeburg prosecutor, Horst Nopens, said one possible factor could be what he called the suspect's frustration with Germany's handling of Saudi refugees.

The suspect, a 50-year-old psychiatrist who has lived in Germany for almost two decades, was arrested at the scene following the three-minute attack in the central city that shocked the country. Police did not name the suspect, identified by German media only as Taleb A.

The driver used emergency exit points to slowly navigate the vehicle towards the market, before picking up speed and ploughing into the crowd, a city police official told reporters.

Those killed were a nine-year-old child and four adults, Magdeburg city official Ronni Krug said, adding that some 41 of the injured had either serious or critical injuries.

"I don't know about you, but I associate the Christmas market with mulled wine and bratwurst, and yesterday people died in this area. Others are fighting for their lives," Krug said.

Authorities closed the market for the remainder of the season.

"What a terrible act it is to injure and kill so many people with such brutality," Chancellor Olaf Scholz said during a visit to the city, where he laid a white rose at a church.

ONLINE POSTS

Posts on the suspect's X account, verified by Reuters, suggested he supported anti-Islam and far-right parties, including the Alternative for Germany (AfD), and had criticised Germany for its handling of Saudi refugees.

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser said the suspect's Islamophobia was clear to see, but she declined to comment on the motive.

Friedrich Merz, leader of the opposition Christian Democrats and current favourite to succeed Scholz as chancellor, cautioned against drawing hasty conclusions.

IMAGES - [1/16]Magdeburg Christmas market, December 21, 2024. REUTERS/Christian Mang Purchase Licensing Rights

"Yesterday's horrific act in Magdeburg does not fit the familiar pattern," he said.

Taleb A. appeared in a number of media interviews in 2019, including with German newspaper FAZ and the BBC, in which he spoke of his work as an activist helping Saudi Arabians and people who had turned away from Islam to flee to Europe.

"There is no good Islam," he told FAZ at the time.

A Saudi source told Reuters that Saudi Arabia had warned German authorities about the suspect after he posted extremist views on his X account that threatened peace and security.

A German security source said Saudi authorities had sent several tips in 2023 and 2024 and that these had been passed on to the relevant security authorities.

A risk assessment conducted last year by German state and federal criminal investigators came to the conclusion that the man posed "no specific danger", the Welt newspaper reported, citing security sources.

Germany's domestic and foreign intelligence agencies both declined to comment on the investigation. The state and federal criminal investigation offices did not respond to Reuters' request for comment.

'CHILDREN SCREAMING'

Andrea Reis was at the market on Friday and returned on Saturday with her daughter Julia to lay a candle by the church overlooking the site, and said she had narrowly escaped being in the path of the car.

Tears ran down her face as she described the scene. "Children screaming, crying for mama. You can't forget that," she said.

Scholz's Social Democrats are trailing both the far-right AfD and the frontrunner conservative opposition in opinion polls before snap elections set for Feb. 23.

The AfD, which enjoys particularly strong support in the former East, has led calls for a crackdown on immigration.

Its chancellor candidate, Alice Weidel, and co-leader Tino Chrupalla issued a statement condemning the attack.

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Additional reporting by Andreas Rinke in Berlin and Pesha Magid in Riyadh Editing by Alexandra Hudson, Hugh Lawson and Frances Kerry

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/death-toll-german-christmas-market-car-ramming-rises-four-bild-reports-2024-12-21/