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Deportation at any cost

How the German government justifies and executes an inhumane asylum acceptance policy


22/11/2025

A crowd of protestors are holding up a anti deportation signs including a large banner that says "Stop All Deportations"

On 15 October, “We’ll Come United” activist Yerro Gaye was deported to Gambia. His deportation is a prime example of the German government’s inhumane deportation practices.

Gaye had been living in Germany since 2019 and had built a life here with his partner, friends, and political activities for the rights of migrants and refugees. He had worked for Hermes for two years before the immigration authorities revoked his work permit.

Gaye wanted to marry his French partner. But the authorities blocked the marriage at the registry office—even though he had submitted all the documents for the wedding.

On 30 September, the police then surprised him during a routine appointment at the immigration office in Haldensleben. They arrested him without warning and detained him for two weeks in a deportation prison in Dresden.

Deportation enforced despite protests

Numerous activists, lawyers, and some politicians tried to prevent Gaye’s deportation. Yet, the authorities questioned his engagement and claimed to have no knowledge of it, despite evidence to the contrary. The court also agreed with the authorities.

“The actions of the authorities clearly show that they did not investigate the case carefully, but rather enforced a preconceived position,” said Gaye’s lawyer. Saxony’s Minister of the Interior ignored an application for a “Härtefall”—a hardship relief. Also Gaye’s decision to leave the country voluntarily was not granted.

On 7 October, around 80 people protested in Haldensleben against Gaye’s detention. The local police harassed the rally with arbitrary restrictions and eventually used batons and pepper spray against peaceful protesters, injuring six people.

Death in the Mediterranean

Yerro had reached Europe via the most dangerous border in the world—the Mediterranean Sea. He was rescued by sea rescue services. According to the UN, 3,530 people have drowned or are missing in the Mediterranean Sea in 2024 alone.

The number of unreported cases is much higher—as is the number of people who never even reach the Mediterranean but die on the way there in the Sahara, as the EU has been blocking safe transport routes for years.Even after managing to cross the Mediterranean Sea, European authorities falsely charge and detain people for years for smuggling, like the three teenage boys of “El Hiblu 3” in Malta or many young Sudanese in Greece.

It is our right to live together and pursue our careers. I don’t deserve to go through this just because I am a migrant or black. I promise you that I will remain strong and never let myself be intimidated. My only crime is that I am a migrant.

Yerro Gaye

Deportation is common practice

Unfortunately, Gaye’s story is not an isolated case. The inhumane practice of deportation has been going on in Germany for a very long time. And no one is spared, not even people who have lived here for many years and built their lives here, often with children.

However, the authorities are currently making a special effort to deport as many people as possible. The Mediendienst Integration reported a 20 percent increase in deportations compared to 2024.

Only 1 – 2 % of asylum-seekers are granted asylum

Time and again, refugee councils and human rights organisations report brutal, often night-time attacks by the police, with deportations to unsafe and unknown destinations: Georgia, Iran or Iraq, Turkey, and various countries in Africa.

People are being deported even though these countries often persecute, imprison, torture and even murder minorities and politically active individuals. Political asylum in Germany is a years-long, gruelling and costly battle against the authorities, usually unsuccessful.

According to Mediendienst Integration, only 1 – 2% of asylum seekers actually receive asylum under Article 16a of the Basic Law. “Human dignity is inviolable”—Article 1 of the German Basic Law—does not apply to all people in Germany.

Deportation at any cost

The right to asylum, like other fundamental rights, was enshrined in the Basic Law after the experience of German fascist terror. However, the federal government has already shown on several occasions that it does not shy away from using illegal means to enforce its inhumane, racist policies. Policies that only help fascism.

The list is long: the black-red coalition knowingly violates EU freedom of movement law by maintaining border controls within the Schengen area. It has abolished support for sea rescue operations, family reunification and faster naturalisation. It knowingly supports deaths in the Mediterranean and at other EU external borders with the help of Frontex, the EU border surveillance agency.

Government cooperates with dictators

Germany and the EU are cooperating with dictatorial regimes to keep refugees out. These include countries such as Tunisia and Libya. Germany also concluded the “Turkey deal” back in 2016. Under this deal, the authorities can deport people who have been in Turkey during their flight—which is very often the case for Syrians, Iranians, and Afghans, among others—without thoroughly reviewing their asylum applications. There are repeated reports of abuse and pogroms against refugees in Turkey.

Now the German government is also pushing for a joint agreement with other EU states to enable the deportation of people to “safe third countries”. The model for this is the British “Rwanda deal.” The Netherlands, among others, has drawn up plans to deport people to Uganda.

Systematic criminalisation of refugees

In addition, the black-red coalition is attempting to expand the list of countries considered “safe countries of origin.” Asylum applications from these countries can be rejected across the board.

Because the Bundesrat has rejected the classification of Tunisia, Algeria, and Morocco as “safe countries of origin,” the federal government is now trying to overturn the requirement for the states to approve such regulations.

Violation of human rights

In 2026, the legislative reforms of the Common European Asylum System (CEAS) will come into force. These were drafted during the “traffic light” coalition government with the then Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock of the Green Party. They virtually abolish the individual right to asylum and even provide for the detention of children.

However, this is not enough for the current federal government: based on the GEAS reforms, the CDU/CSU and SPD now want to convert some accommodations into “special facilities”—effectively prisons. According to the government’s plans, refugees will not be allowed to leave the premises if another EU country is responsible for their asylum procedure under the “Dublin Regulation.”

Just recently, the UN Social Committee reprimanded Germany for the first time because refugees in the “Dublin procedure” have been deprived of accommodation, food, and health care. This new procedure violates social human rights, reports Pro Asyl.

Although the German government has denied basic human rights for refugees and many migrants, there are at least still some non-governmental institutions offering help—if one has the financial means and enough mental strength to seek it. Yet, experienced lawyers, counselling agencies, and NGOs are highly overloaded and even scams have been reported. People seeking protection then need to rely on the support and energy of activists who often fiercely try to fight this inhumane system. Yet, even supporting refugees and migrants is already criminalized in many European countries like Poland and it is rumoured that there are plans to implement similar repression in Germany.

Altogether there are no real safe passages to reach protection and asylum in the EU—not even for people escaping genocides like in Gaza, Sudan, or the DRC. Germany is often celebrated as a country that would have learned from its horrific genocidal past yet, the recent developments, experiences of the people who have been re-traumatized by the system, and those who have perished or disappeared tell another story.

News from Berlin and Germany, 19th November 2025

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


19/11/2025

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Die Linke launches its election campaign with Elif Eralp

Die Linke Berlin has selected Elif Eralp as its lead candidate for the Berlin elections in 2026. The 44-year-old has been deputy chair of the Berlin Die Linke since May 2025, as well as a member of the Berlin House of Representatives since 2021. There, the lawyer is deputy parliamentary group chair and spokesperson for migration and anti-discrimination. In her speech on November 15, Eralp emphasized her ambition to become Governing Mayor of Berlin and presented housing and rental policy as the most important campaign issue. Source: rbb

Liebknecht-Luxemburg commemoration may not take place in 2026

The traditional commemoration of the assassination of labor leaders Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht in 1919 may not take place in 2026, due to construction works. For 107 years, apart from the Nazi era, thousands of people have gathered at the cemetery in Lichtenberg on the second Sunday in January to commemorate those leaders who were murdered. The Lichtenberg district office has now informed the alliance of various left-wing groups, which has been preparing and registering silent commemorations and demonstrations for many years, that no permit might be granted for the large-scale event planned for January 11, 2026. Source: bz

NEWS FROM GERMANY

German rent calculator finds more than 140,000 cases of exploitation in 1 year

Around 146,700 tenants who have used Die Linke’s rent calculator in the past year found out that they were paying illegally high rent. The party is set to propose a Rent Law in the Bundestag. To mark the date, Die Linke has released figures about how many people have used the calculator and what results they found. In the first year, 220,000 tenants across Germany used the Mietwucher and around two-thirds found they were being overcharged. Moreover, among the tenants who found they were paying too much, half found that they were paying 50% over the maximum local comparative rent set by the rent index (Mietspiegel). Source: iamexpat

How many people belong to a trade union in Germany?

Trade union membership across Europe is on the decline, and this holds true for Germany as well. According to a new study from the German Economic Institute (IW), 20.2% of employees in Germany were members of a trade union in 2016, compared to 16,6 % in 2023. On the other side, while the number of union members has declined over that period, the number of people employed in Germany has risen. According to the IW, the decline can be explained, among other aspects, due to the low mobilisation of employees in small businesses, “atypical” modes of employment (such as part-time work), and employees with a migration background. Source: iamexpat

Military service in Germany: all young men must undergo medical examination

According to AFP information, an agreement was reached during consultations between the Federal Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) and representatives of the coalition parliamentary groups. The new model will require all 18-year-old men to undergo a medical examination. If there are not enough volunteers among those examined, a lottery will decide who must perform military service. Pistorius’ original model was initially based on voluntary service. Union MPs called for automatic conscription if the planned model failed to meet NATO’s recruitment targets. More recently, a proposal for a lottery to determine who must undergo medical examination has caused a stir. Source: bz

Fridays for Future demands more pressure for climate protection

Fridays for Future is criticising the German government and the EU for their climate policy. Protests happened on November 14 in over 60 cities nationwide, accompanied by actions at the UN Climate Change Conference COP30 in Belém, Brazil. The movement has called on the German government to exert more international pressure for climate protection. Climate activist Luisa Neubauer criticised the agreement between the CDU, CSU, and SPD to lower the air passenger tax in an interview with RBB and Deutschlandfunk radio. Neubauer spoke of “fossil fuel tax breaks” for airlines. Source: mdr

German government agrees on record debt for 2026

The German parliament’s budget committee has signed off on the budget presented by Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil (SPD). The exploding cost of Germany’s welfare system is supposedly putting pressure on the coffers — along with the billions of euros for rearming the Bundeswehr. The new borrowing of some 180 billion euros is the second highest in the country’s history, beaten only during the COVID-19 pandemic. It will be put to a final vote in the Bundestag. Government representatives, nevertheless, clearly looked pleased on November 14, even if, on the day before, the Council of Economic Experts had accused the German government of spending too little money on investment. Source: dw

NS auction in Neuss canceled

Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul (CDU) welcomed the cancellation of the planned auction of Holocaust documents in Neuss. The Felzmann auction house wanted to auction letters from concentration camp inmates, a Jewish star, and Gestapo papers on November 18. Following protests by the International Auschwitz Committee, the auction was canceled. Wadephul said he expects the matter to be clarified. He added that it must be ensured that the crimes of the Shoah are not used for commercial gain in the future. The auction house has not yet made a public statement. Source: wdr

Antifascist, in solidarity with Palestine, stop the AfD youth group

Statement by the Palestine Action Alliance, Leipzig


15/11/2025

At the end of November, the AfD is founding a new youth organisation.

In doing this, the AfD wants to tie militant Neo-Nazis and their networks closer to the party. The fascists in the AfD are following a strategy of insurrection. They want a leadership of terror in the tradition of the Nazis. The mass deportation of millions of people is only possible with massive violence and terror—against Muslims, against people with a migration background, against queer people, and against all people who do not fit in their world view. That means all of us.

We know that anti-Muslim racism is part of the DNA of the AfD. This is made possible by the racism in the middle of society. Since the start of the genocide in Gaza, state violence against Muslim people has grown immensely.

The AfD is markedly pro-Israel, supports its genocidal government, and dreams of ethnic cleansing of migrants in Germany in the way that Israel carries it out against Palestinians. It is not hard to imagine that if the AfD were to take power, Palestinians and Muslim people would be the first victims of their rule of terror. This makes it even more important that the Palestine movement involves itself massively in the fight against Fascism.

For the end of November, the Widersetzen (resistance) alliance is organising massive protests against the formation of the AfD youth organisation. The Palestine movement is part of this, as consistent anti-fascism is anti-racist.

Two years of genocide have shown what the people in power are capable of. But the last two years have also shown that people striving for justice and will not be silent.

It was the Palestine movement which, despite state repression and massive police violence, was on the streets protesting against the massacre of people in Gaza. It was the Palestine movement, which, despite media sanctions and smear campaigns, stayed on the streets and demanded an end to genocide, apartheid, and ethnic cleansing. It was the Palestine movement which initiated the largest anti-war movement in recent decades. And it is the Palestine movement which has the power to make an important contribution towards strengthening the fight against Fascism and to blockade the AfD, including their youth organisation.

Part of this resistance contains factions whose positions on Palestine we reject. We are convinced that this has got to change. We can achieve this at best by working together with such factions to resist fascism, and as part of this to confidently fight for our positions.

Free Palestine! Stop the AfD Youth!

This statement is supported by the following organisations:

  • Chemnitz4Palestine
  • Free Palestine Bonn
  • Gaza Komitee Köln
  • Erfurt Unsilenced
  • Thawra Hamburg
  • Jena für Palästina
  • Palästina Spricht München
  • Gaza Komitee Berlin
  • The Left Berlin
  • Students for Palestine Freiburg
  • Palästina Solidarität Köln
  • Free Palestine Dresden
  • Palästinaaktionsbündnis Leipzig

This statement was originally written in German. Translation: Phil Butland

News from Berlin and Germany, 12th November 2025

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


12/11/2025

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Largest refugee shelter in Berlin to be closed by 2026

A refugee distribution center, known as HUB, has been set up on part of the former Berlin Tegel Airport. Currently, only 1,500 places in that central refugee shelter are occupied with people from Ukraine, according to “DW”. The state wants to clear the site on the former airport grounds in the coming months anyway, and it wants to build a new neighborhood there in the future. Meanwhile, Berlin’s government emphasizes the advantages of smaller-scale and decentralized accommodation. “Decentralized accommodation means distributing the burden among many participants and creating good neighborly relations,” affirmed Cansel Kiziltepe (SPD), Berlin Senator for Labor, Social Affairs, Equality, and Integration. Source: welt

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Warken announces average additional contribution for health insurance funds

Federal Health Minister Nina Warken (CDU) has announced that she will set the average additional contribution covering expenses for health insurance funds at 2.9%. “Our task is to work together withthe health insurance funds and other experts in the so-called estimation group to determine how high the average additional contribution covering expenses isexpected to be,” Warken told the “Rheinische Post” newspaper. The health minister also expressed the possibility of introducing a new patient fee if citizens do not adhere to the proposed primary care system. “We are planning to introduce a primary care system in which people will not be able to go directly to a specialist without referal,“ she added. Source: n-tv

Not only criminals deported to Syria

Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul’s (CDU) trip to Damascus has sparked a debate about the repatriation of Syrians. CDU Secretary General Linnemann has another opinion, though. He has spoken out in favor of the return of Syrian refugees, even those who are not criminals or dangerous individuals. Given the end of the civil war in the country, he affirmed on the ARD program “Bericht aus Berlin” that there is “no longer any reason for asylum in Germany.” Linnemann added that talks with the Syrian interim president would take place in the coming weeks, with the aim of creating a legal basis for repatriation. Source: n-tv

Germans broadly support democracy, oppose far right

The German study “Mitte Studie” (“Center Study”), conducted annually since 2006 by the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, aims to serve as an early warning system for anti-democratic developments. For this report, 2,000 people were interviewed. The sample represents a cross-section of German society in terms of voting behavior, education, income, and origin. There, almost 80% of respondents said they are staunchly committed to democracy, up 6% from four years ago. Support for overt right-wing extremism in Germany is on the decline: only 3% of respondents have a firmly right-wing extremist world view. However, the study also shows that right-wing extremism tends to be more prevalent among youth. Source: dw

Magdeburg: trial for suspect of deadly market attack begins

A trial begun on November 10 for aman accused of carrying out an attack on a Christmas market in Magdeburg last December. There, six people were killed and more than 300 others wounded. The suspect, Taleb A., is also charged with attempted murder in relation to another 338 people. Taleb A. has been in custody since the day of the crime. If he is found guilty, he faces life imprisonment for murder. At the time of the attack, officials said Taleb A., was an “untypical” attacker. They said he planned and prepared the crime in detail over several weeks without the help of accomplices. Source: bbc

Man held after cars in Hanau found smeared with swastikas in blood

A man is being held by police after about 50 vehicles were smeared in human blood in Hanau. Cars, walls and postboxes were defaced sometimes with swastikas. A 31-year-old Romanian man was detained at his home and a breathalyser test showed he had a high blood alcohol level. Investigators said their initial findings suggested the man had reacted to an incident at work and would be referred to a psychiatric clinic. Bundestag Vice President Omid Nouripour (Greens) said the attack had left him speechless and needed to be solved quickly. Source: bbc

Three issues still unresolved regarding the new military service

Thomas Röwekamp (CDU), chairman of the Bundestag’s Defense Committee, is raising some issues regarding the plans for military service. For instance, he made it clear that the CDU no longer insists on a lottery system for selecting young men for conscription. His party also claims about the need for a ‘growth path’ for the active forces in the law, in cases where “you need an additional 10,000 men and women per year,” as he affirmed. Röwekamp referred also to the issue of whether all of those doing military service should be considered temporary soldiers, as Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) wants. Source: handelsblatt

A real Left party must stand with BDS and PACBI

Die Linke and Zionism


09/11/2025

On Saturday, November 15, the Berlin regional conference of Die Linke will host a decisive vote on whether the party will support two crucial international movements: BDS (Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions), and PACBI (Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel).

As the name suggests, the BDS movement is a Palestinian-led nonviolent boycott and divestment campaign that seeks to apply international pressure on Israel to comply with “Israel’s obligations under international law,” including withdrawal from occupied territories, equality for Arab-Palestinian citizens, and the right of Palestinian refugees to return.

The PACBI is a part of this broader BDS movement, launched in 2004 by Palestinian academics and intellectuals. PACBI specifically calls for a boycott of Israeli academic and cultural institutions––not individuals––which it holds complicit in perpetuating Israeli occupation and oppression of Palestinians, in order to isolate Israel internationally and pressure it to change its policies.

Support for BDS and PACBI would mark a historic turning point for Die Linke, long plagued by internal contradictions and a legacy of alliances with Zionist figures, going as low as defending “Israel‘s right to exist” via the German infamous “Staatsräson” (“reason of state”). This moment could help redefine the party’s identity as a credible, anti-imperialist force committed to Palestinian self-determination and international solidarity—a much-needed shift that could reverberate across Germany’s broader social and political landscape.

The Party’s Fading Revolutionary Roots

Founded as a merger of the East German socialist tradition and the Western anti-capitalist left, Die Linke once represented a revolutionary alternative to establishment politics. Over time, however, it has undergone a profound ideological transformation. Once an anti-imperialist force against oppression worldwide, the party’s politics have aligned ever more with reformist, social-democratic tendencies—most troublingly with a pronounced pro-Zionist current that undermines its foundational principles.

This oxymoron manifests through the “Anti-Deutsch” faction: steadfast antinationalists who are progressive on most issues, except for their deep loyalty to the ethnonationalist state of Israel—a clear cherry-picking of their principles. Being a “Zionist leftist” is as self-contradictory as claiming to be a “leftist racist.”

This contradiction finds expression in old, key figures such as Bodo Ramelow and Dietmar Bartsch, who routinely affirm “Israel’s right to exist” and condemn Palestinian resistance in conciliatory or dismissive terms. Petra Pau, likewise, has adopted a western Eurocentric narrative that labels Palestinian resistance as terrorism—a glaring betrayal of the socialist principles once professed in her upbringing in the GDR. Perhaps most emblematic is Klaus Lederer, whose aggressive defense of Israeli policies, reliance on whataboutism, pinkwashing rhetoric, and repetition of historical revisionism about Palestine have deeply harmed the party’s credibility.

The influential Silberlocken (“silver curls,” suggestive of their advanced age)—Ramelow, Bartsch, and Gregor Gysi—have consistently defended Israel’s position while discrediting Palestinian voices. Ramelow’s proud display of the Israeli flag after October 7, 2023, and Bartsch’s circulation of fabricated atrocity stories illustrate an ingrained pro-Zionist bias. Gysi’s racial insensitivity (including his infamous use of the N-word on live television) and his support for cross-party alliances—from the hard-right CDU to the also militaristic neoliberal Greens—demonstrate a willingness to sideline anti-imperialist positions for opportunistic coalition politics.

For a politician who often invokes Rosa Luxemburg, such posturing represents a complete betrayal of the revolutionary legacy he claims to embody.

The situation has deteriorated to the point that figures with openly reactionary backgrounds are tolerated within a supposedly leftist party. Andreas Büttner, formerly of the CDU and FDP (of all parties), exemplifies the fanatic Zionist wing, publicly backing Israeli territorial claims and military aid—a stance so damaging that members have demanded his expulsion. Similarly, a Leipzig member once known for wearing Israel Defense Forces attire reportedly harassed and intimidated pro-Palestine activists within the party. These aberrations expose Die Linke’s alarming tolerance for elements that clash with the most basic principles of socialist and anti-imperialist solidarity.

Whether they are committed Zionists or opportunists afraid of the misused “antisemite” label, such figures reflect a broader institutional shift: an alignment with German state and NATO narratives masquerading as progressive politics. The fear of losing coalition opportunities with neoliberal and militaristic counterparts—the SPD and the Greens—has often been invoked to justify censorship, disciplinary measures, and the silencing of pro-Palestinian voices.

The Rise of Pro-Zionist Factionalism

In this context, grassroots activists and younger members have repeatedly challenged the dominant pro-Zionist consensus. One of the most egregious examples was the expulsion of Palestinian-German Ramsis Kilani, ordered by Berlin state party leader Katina Schubert and then-co-leader Martin Schirdewan in December 2024. Schirdewan, still co-chair of The Left in the EU Parliament (so far largely silent about Palestine and absolutely silent regarding Israel critique, in contrast to his fellow fraction collegues from other countries or non-white fellow member from the same party), justified the move by citing alleged “glorification of terrorism” under pressure from hard right-wing mainstream media—a familiar tactic used to delegitimize Palestinian solidarity.

A public rally demanding Kilani’s reinstatement, held on October 11, 2025, outside the Karl Liebknecht House—Die Linke’s headquarters—illustrated the depth of internal unrest. Despite strong grassroots support, the party’s disciplinary apparatus has repeatedly delayed any meaningful resolution, a symptom of how unsettled the internal debate over Palestine solidarity remains.

The leadership’s ambivalence—reflected in its hesitations and repeated delays of the BDS and PACBI support vote—reveals the extent of these contradictions. Notably, Die Linke’s lethargic and equivocal response during nearly two years of Israeli mass violence in Gaza has drawn heavy condemnation. While international left movements mobilized in solidarity, Die Linke initially voiced unconditional support for Israel and remained silent or evasive for months. Only under sustained grassroots and public pressure did the leadership finally acknowledge the catastrophic humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza.

At the “United for Gaza” demonstration in September 2025, co-chair Ines Schwerdtner faced intense criticism for the leadership’s earlier silence and ultimately issued a public apology. Her counterpart, Jan van Aken, worsened tensions days earlier by refusing to describe Israeli actions as genocide and instead denounced parts of the pro-Palestine movement, even suggesting potential expulsions for members displaying “extremist” solidarity.

Such remarks highlighted not only internal disunity but also a profound ideological estrangement from anti-colonial principles.

Grassroots Resistance and Renewal

Over recent months, the party’s grassroots—especially in migrant-majority districts like Neukölln and Wedding—have carried forward the banner of solidarity. Local associations have organized protests, teach-ins, and community events centered on ending German and Die Linke complicity in Israeli crimes.

A noteworthy example came at the neighborhood festival in Berlin-Neukölln, held at bUm and organized by the district branch of Die Linke, where discussions about Palestine solidarity took center stage. These forums, open to the public, signaled a growing determination to reclaim the party’s direction from above.

Well-known figures such as Ferat Koçak and Özlem Demirel embody this generational and ideological shift. Koçak, elected to the Bundestag in February 2025, stems from activist roots among Berlin’s Kurdish and migrant communities, focusing on climate justice, refugee rights, anti-fascism and anti-racism. Demirel, serving in the European Parliament, has consistently condemned Israeli apartheid and German complicity, drawing vital connections between anti-racism, feminism, and anti-imperialism.

Other standout new and younger voices include Cansin Köktürk, who wore Palestinian solidarity symbols in the Bundestag despite censorship threats and disciplinary proceedings; Nicole Gohlke, one of the few white German MPs demanding an immediate ceasefire and accountability for German arms deliveries; and observers Cem Ince and Lea Reisner, who joined Palestine solidarity demonstrations in Berlin in October 2025 and faced police violence for their participation.

These members and their networks represent the remnants of a genuinely internationalist and principled left within Die Linke.

Their efforts underscore a growing chasm between the old guard—deeply invested in pro-Zionist legitimacy—and a younger, more radical generation that recognizes Palestine solidarity as inseparable from all other liberation struggles. The November 15 conference vote, set against escalating repression of Palestine activism by German authorities, intensifies the need for Die Linke to make an unambiguous choice.

The Broader Significance

Should Die Linke vote to support BDS and PACBI, the decision would resonate far beyond Berlin. It could signal a fundamental course correction—challenging Germany’s stifling consensus that condemns criticism of Israel as antisemitism and exposing the political manipulation inherent in that accusation. It would demonstrate that genuine left politics cannot coexist with colonial apologism and that universalist ethics demand support for Palestinian liberation, not silence before power.

Such a vote could also reshape Germany’s political discourse by reclaiming anti-imperialist language from liberal hypocrisy. It would show that solidarity with Palestine is not an “issue” but a moral and political foundation of any credible left project. The German state‘s historical responsibility, born from the Holocaust, does not excuse contemporary colonialism and ethnic cleansing; it obliges unwavering opposition to all forms of racism and apartheid—including that perpetrated by the Israeli state.

By contrast, continued hesitation or rejection would mark Die Linke’s final descent into centrist liberalism, at best. It would confirm the party’s abandonment of revolutionary internationalism in favor of parliamentary respectability and moral cowardice. Already eroded by electoral decline, leadership crises, and the departure of figures unable to reconcile their positions with the party’s direction, Die Linke would risk becoming politically irrelevant—a vessel for moral compromise rather than conviction.

The upcoming Berlin vote thus holds enormous significance. Whether or not the resolution passes, it will clarify where the party stands: with the oppressed or with the oppressors; with liberation movements worldwide or with imperial narratives disguised as social-democratic rhetoric.

Beyond Symbolism: A Moral Imperative

The debate also exposes how Palestine has become Europe’s most consequential political mirror. In Germany especially, violent state repression of Palestinian activism—bans on protests, censorship of artists, and criminalization of speech—has reached authoritarian depths. Against this backdrop, a partisan alignment with Zionism is not neutral; it is complicity. When activists are detained for waving flags, signs or chanting for liberation, and journalists face defamation for covering Israeli crimes, the insistence that “we cannot intervene” becomes indistinguishable from support for apartheid.

For a left that once invoked anti-colonial solidarity as a moral compass, neutrality today is impossible. Rosa Luxemburg, Frantz Fanon, and Amílcar Cabral taught us that liberation is indivisible. The same capitalist and imperial networks fueling wars from Gaza to the Sahel are upheld by governments that Germany allies itself with—through arms exports and normalized diplomatic cover. If Die Linke cannot oppose this unambiguously, then it forfeits the right to define itself as a leftist party at all.

At a time when Germany’s ruling parties deploy militarism abroad and austerity at home, the left’s silence on Palestine mirrors its broader capitulation. From NATO weapons deliveries to Israel and Ukraine to unconditional support for United States foreign policy, the German establishment has merged moral rhetoric with war economics. Breaking that consensus requires courage—not bureaucratic caution.

As the November 15 conference approaches, the choice before the delegates is stark. Either Die Linke rediscovers its purpose as a movement rooted in emancipatory politics and solidarity—or it becomes just another party defending the status quo.

History will remember which side it chose.