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News from Berlin and Germany, 24th July 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


24/07/2024

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Climate activist jailed for one year and four months

The Tiergarten district court has sentenced a 32-year-old ‘Last Generation’ activist to a prison sentence for one year and four months without probation. Between October 2022 and February 2023, she constantly taped herself to roads or to traffic sign bridges and, together with other activists, she started road blockades. On 7 March 2023, the group also carried out a paint attack on the listed façade of the Federal Ministry of Transport with the help of a rented fire engine. According to reports, the removal of the paint cost around 7,400 euros. Source: rbb

Ver.di puts indefinite strikes for daycare centres to a vote

The trade union ver.di wis to call on its members among daycare centre employees in Berlin to vote on strikes for an indefinite period. The ballot is to begin at the beginning of September. If more than 75 per cent vote in favour of a so-called enforced strike, ver.di could call for an indefinite strike in state-owned daycare centres, according to the union’s statement. Explaining its decision, ver.di said that the Senate has still not signalled that it will enter into negotiations. This week warning strikes are expected in the capital, but without actual closures. Source: rbb

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Lieferando: backdoor wage cuts?

‘Lieferando Workers Collective’ (LWC) protested in Berlin against the big delivery company. The LWC claims to have collected 330 signatures as part of a petition to draw attention to inadequate working conditions. A new pay scale is causing such discontentment. In the future, full-time employees will earn 300 to 400 euros less net, explains a member of the LWC at the rally. Previously, a delivery-based ‘peak time bonus’ of two euros per order applied to particularly order-intensive shifts. This performance-based regulation has been criticised for everal reasons, among them them is the increase in the risk of accidents. ‘Lieferando has not reduced wages,’ the company continues to claim. Source: nd-aktuell

A tough world

A lawsuit filed by the daily newspaper ‘Junge Welt’ against the Federal Republic of Germany was dismissed by the Berlin Administrative Court on Thursday. The newspaper published in Berlin had taken legal action against being labelled as ‘left-wing extremist’ in the Federal Ministry of the Interior’s report. According to ‘Junge Welt’ in a special edition on the subject, the term ‘left-wing extremist’ is not only damaging to business, but also contradicts freedom of the press and freedom of opinion. ‘Junge Welt’ intends to take its case, rejected at first instance, all the way to the European Court of Human Rights if necessary. Source: nd-akutell

Germany’s coalition agrees on a budget for next year

Germany’s Cabinet has agreed on a draft budget for 2025, with policies intended to counter recent weak economic growth. The total budget for 2025 is €480.6 billion – €8 billion less than in 2024. Despite this, Germany’s finance ministry has allocated a record €78 billion for investments. However, the budget is not as thrifty as some expected, with most parts of government receiving more money than last year, including the transport, interior, family, defense, foreign and education ministries. Tax advantages are planned, among other things, to attract foreign skilled workers to Germany and to increase spending on research and development. Source: dw

News from Berlin and Germany, 17th July 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


17/07/2024

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Many injured and arrested at pro-Palestinian demonstration in Berlin

On Saturday evening, a pro-Palestinian protest in Berlin saw multiple arrests and injuries. Under the slogan “Stop the Gaza genocide,” the demonstration marched from the Rathaus Steglitz underground station via Walther-Schreiber-Platz to Innsbrucker Platz in Schöneberg. It was organised to run from 2pm to 7pm and the police counted around 600 participants. During the rally, the police said bottles were thrown at officers. According to the fire brigade, several police officers were injured, as were eight participants in the demonstration, one of whom severely. Source: rbb

BSW now also in Berlin

Far away from the centre of the capital, in the eastern suburb of Adlershof, the fifth regional association of the BSW was founded on Sunday. A few dozen members met in “Theater Ost,” a small stage in the middle of the newly created “Media City,” to elect the board and other committees. A banner with the slogan “The sun rises in the east” is emblazoned on the façade of the building. The controversial blogger Manaf Hassan, who is regarded as an Assad and Putin propagandist, is among those running for the extended board. Source: taz

When the state fails

In Berlin, four women became victims of femicide within four weeks. The state hesitates in the fight against patriarchal violence due to concerns about data protection. According to the Federal Criminal Police Office’s (BKA) “Domestic Violence” report, there were 155 femicides across Germany last year. “Where is the social outcry?” asks Lilly S. from the “Stop femicides!” initiative. The group has already counted 51 femicides this year, but suspects that the number of unreported cases is high. “The BKA’s statistics are not comprehensive enough,” criticises Lilly S. Besides. The activist also insists that media reporting often contributes to the trivialisation of femicides. Source: taz

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

“Disarm Kiel – sink the arms industry”

From 3 to 8 September, antimilitarists from various countries plan a camp in Kiel under the motto “Disarm Kiel  Sink the arms industry.” The action will end with a supra-regional antimilitarist demonstration in Kiel on 7 September. The city is a hotspot for the arms industry today. The spokesperson for the antimilitarist alliance “Disarm Rheinmetall” sees the need to resist this. In recent years, the antimilitarist alliance has organised action camps in front of sites related to the arms industry, each lasting several days, to demonstrate that anti-militarism is possible in theory and practice. The camp was held twice in Unterlüss, Lower Saxony, the headquarters of the Rheinmetall Group. Source: nd

Police officers in racist chat get away with it

From 2014 to 2018, police officers exchanged right-wing extremist and racist content in chat groups. However, the Frankfurt Higher Regional Court does not consider this to be a criminal offence – due to a loophole. The content had not been disseminated, but only posted in private, closed chat groups with a manageable number of people, and some members were very closely connected to each other. The chat group of officers from the 1st Frankfurt police station had been uncovered during investigations into the “NSU 2.0” complex. Source: migazin

How right-wing is Brandenburg?

Statements considered right-wing or extreme right-wing are in some cases very popular in Brandenburg. This is the result of a representative survey conducted by Infratest Dimap on behalf of WDR. Experts say this is a deepening of an existing trend. Based on the collected data, Infratest Dimap concluded that 8% of respondents have an extreme right-wing worldview. Among AfD supporters, these figures are significantly higher: 23% showed an extreme right-wing attitude. According to Roland Verwiebe, professor of sociology at the University of Potsdam, many people are drifting to the right out of insecurity and because they have lost trust in central social institutions. Source: rbb

Germany condemns a plot to assassinate Rheinmetall boss

German politicians are stunned over a report that Russia planned to murder a German arms company boss. US intelligence is said to have uncovered the plot against Rheinmetall chief Armin Papperger. Rheinmetall is among the largest European suppliers of armour technology and artillery shells to Ukraine. On the sidelines of the NATO summit, Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (Greens) said Russia was waging a hybrid war of aggression in the West, without referring to any plot explicitly. The Kremlin dismissed reports of the alleged assassination plot, claiming that the report relies on anonymous sources and lacks “serious documentation.” Source: dw

Storms, hail, rain, lightning – and a tornado?

Storms caused severe damage in large parts of Germany over the weekend. In Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Lower Saxony and Saxony, there were hundreds of police and fire brigade interventions: around 320 storm-related operations were reported to the police. The main focus was on the eastern and upper Allgäu regions and the west of the Lindau district. In the North Rhine-Westphalian town of Telgte, a tornado-like storm caused severe damage to an industrial estate. Leipzig, in Saxony, was flooded in some places on Friday afternoon. Source: tagesschau

Görlitz-Zgorzelec: on the edge of legality

The bridge between Görlitz and the Polish town of Zgorzelec is not just a bridge – it is a symbol. It was blown up by the Nazis in 1945 and only rebuilt in 2004. On 16 October 2023, stationary border controls were set up for the first time on the bridge, as well as at other points on the borders with Poland, the Czech Republic and Switzerland – initially for three months. Permanent controls would violate the EU Schengen Agreement. Temporary border controls are permitted, but only if there is a “serious threat to public policy or internal security.” The “serious threat” with which the Federal Ministry of the Interior (BMI) legally justifies the controls: the “smuggling of migrants.” Source: nd

News from Berlin and Germany, 10th July 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


10/07/2024

NEWS FROM BERLIN

280 Berlin “Kitas” on strike for 5 days

The union ver.di wants minimum staffing ratios and increased staff training for daycare centres (“Kitas”), but an ongoing conflict between them and the Berlin Senate is in deadlock. Last Monday a “warning strike” began, closing 280 daycare centres across the city and impacting around 35,000 children. The union is not demanding more money for its workers, but Kita employees are trying to get the Berlin Senate to agree on a number of policies, among them minimum staffing ratios, rules to protect the health of staff, improved training and more time for educational work aimed at increasing the overall quality of care. Source: The Berliner

AfD loses bank account

The AfD has lost its account with Berliner Volksbank. This was announced by Omas gegen Rechts after a meeting with the bank’s CEO, Carsten Jung. The anti-fascist senior citizens initiated a petition on the online platform innn.it two months ago and have now collected more than 33,500 signatures in favour of ending Berliner Volksbank’s business relationship with the party. The bank itself did not want to confirm the move, citing banking confidentiality . However, when asked by the taz newspaper whether the donation account had been closed, they were told: “Have a look at the AfD website.” On the party’s website, the option of donating by bank transfer to the account at Berliner Volksbank has disappeared. Source: taz

Neo-Nazis beat several people to the ground in Berlin

In Berlin, right-wing extremists attacked a group of people on their way to a demonstration in the Marzahn-Hellersdorf district. Several people were injured. According to witnesses, the masked perpetrators were armed with wooden clubs, batons, quartz gloves and tear gas. The attack took place on Saturday afternoon at Ostkreuz in front of a Biomarkt. The anti-fascists had met there to travel together to the demonstration. Up to 20 neo-Nazis stormed into the group of people waiting at Ostkreuz in rows of two and attacked “two at a time.” A police spokesman mentioned that a federal police officer was also attacked and injured when she tried to intervene. Source: t-online

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Hartz IV returns

The federal government wants to use stricter rules to encourage more recipients of the so-called ‘citizen’s allowance’ to take up work. This is part of a 31-page catalogue of measures, the “Growth initiative – new economic dynamism for Germany” published by the government last week. This annoncment has come while the introduction of ‘basic child benefit’, approved in the coalition-governments agreement, has not been implemented according to the planning and has received no public response. It had always been described as one of the government’s most important social policy projects. Seven social associations and the DGB had already warned against a freeze on citizen’s allowance. Source: jungewelt

Major construction kicks off to fix Germany’s railways

On July 15th the state-owned railway company, “Deutsche Bahn (DB)” will start a massive renovation program. It plans to renew 40 main train routes by 2030. Each of them will be closed for several months while construction work is carried out. The first slated for renewal is the line connecting Frankfurt and Mannheim known as the Riedbahn. This plan – the largest infrastructure program in DB’s history – is expected to cost €45 billion. Train delays with DB have steadily increased in recent years. In 2023, less than two-thirds of long-distance trains reached their destination on time – a record low. Source: dw

German defense minister not satisfied with the military budget gap

German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) expressed his dissatisfaction with the outcome of the budget negotiations for the country’s defense budget. A coalition deal on next year’s domestic budget provides less for the armed forces in 2025 than Pistorius had demanded as Germany seeks to beef up its armed forces. However, while the budget may not have met Pistorius’s hopes, it still keeps German defense spending above the NATO target of 2% of gross domestic product. Meanwhile, German military high officers have warned that additional funds are needed immediately for Germany to be combat-ready in five years. Source: dw

News from Berlin and Germany, 3rd July 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


03/07/2024

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Street renamed and inaugurated after black lesbian feminist

In Berlin-Kreuzberg, part of Manteuffelstraße was renamed Audre-Lorde-Straße back in September 2023, causing confusion among residents, parcel deliverers and authorities, since the official inauguration only took place recently. At the inauguration, district mayor Clara Herrmann (Greens) apologised for the fact that the renaming had “taken longer.” The reason given by the administration for not putting up new street signs for months was that the renaming process had led to unforeseeable problems. The new street name brings more diversity to Berin. It honours the black lesbian feminist Audre Lorde, who taught at the FU Berlin in the 1980s and 1990s. Source: freilich

NEWS FROM GERMANY

New citizenship law comes into force

On Thursday, 27 June 2024, the Act on the Modernisation of the Citizenship Law comes into force. With it, the Federal Ministry of the Interior is implementing a key reform. People who work in Germany and are well integrated can become German citizens after just five years instead of eight. Moreover, they no longer need to give up their previous citizenship. Under strict conditions, naturalisation will also be possible in the future after three years. At the same time, the requirements for commitment to the free democratic basic order will become stricter: naturalization will be ruled out when racism or antisemitism is identified. Source: bmi

Hundreds of right-wing extremists in the police

Within one and a half years, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) has dealt with a total of 739 cases of employees of security authorities with indications of possible right-wing extremist attitudes. The current report covers the period from 1 July 2021 to 31 December 2022 and looks at both state and federal authorities. According to the report, state authorities accounted for 189 cases. However, the Federal Ministry of the Interior points out that more than half of the suspected cases and the cases in which actual indications were found had already been reported in the previous status report. Source: taz

AfD party conference in Essen: football and federal cooperation

Before the party conference in Essen, there was much speculation about how the AfD leadership would deal with the turbulence of recent months. Neither Alice Weidel nor Tino Chrupalla cut a good figure in the affairs surrounding Maximilian Krah and Petr Bystron. Things turned out quite differently in Essen. Weidel opened the party conference with a welcoming speech, speaking about her party using football metaphors, saying that the “team” has to make a “tactical change”, even if a “talented player” (Krah) must leave. Churupalla cited the cooperation within the federal executive and with the state chairmen as an important point in his work review. Source: nd

Nothing new for the East

First in Saxony and Thuringia, then a few weeks later in Brandenburg: in all three states, the AfD threatens to become the strongest force. This would be a fiasco for the CDU in the states, but also for the party chairman Friedrich Merz. So what to do? Last weekend, Merz invited the party presidium, i.e., the inner circle of leadership, to Berlin. An important campaigner was not present, though: Saxony’s Prime Minister Michael Kretschmer. Officially, there were scheduling problems, but one can also speculate that the Kretschmer did not really wish to participate in the meeting. Source: tagesschau

Euro 2024: the AfD and a debate over ‘woke’ national team

During Euro 2024, many German politicians are supporting the host team, but this is not the case of several members of the far-right AfD party. According to them, the German team is not German enough. They do not share the sense of pride in the country’s role as host or the hope for another victory like that during the Germany-hosted 2006 World Cup. AfD leaders such as Maximilian Krah and Björn Höcke complain instead about Germany having become “woke,” “politically correct,” and “the rainbow team.” Source: dw

German weapons exports on the way to a new record

Arms exports from Germany rose 30% in the first semester of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023, as shown by data from the Ministry for the Economy. If the trend continues for the remainder of the year, the total value of arms sales is set to reach a new record. Between January 1 and June 18, the government approved total weapons exports worth at least €7.48 billion. The surge in exports comes despite the governing coalition of Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) promising to curb arms deliveries when it took office in December 2021, especially to non-European Union and NATO members. Source: dw

Millions on the sideline

“Every seventh child in Germany is at risk of poverty,” the Federal Statistical Office announced on Monday. According to the Office, children and young people of parents with “lower” educational qualifications are disproportionately affected. Meanwhile, the traffic light coalition is allowing its “‘central social policy project’ – basic child benefit – to wither away,” Christoph Butterwegge, a political scientist from the University of Köln, commented. Since the beginning of the debate, it has been “a tactical stalemate within the traffic light coalition,” continued the inequality researcher, who says that the basic child benefit to be launched only in 2025 is “a waste of time.” Source: jW

News from Berlin and Germany, 26th June 2024

Weekly news round-up from Berlin and Germany


26/06/2024

NEWS FROM BERLIN

Berlin: several racist attacks in a short space of time

Several racist attacks have happened in Berlin in the space of just a few days. On Wednesday, a stranger punched a 13-year-old in the face on Eylauer Straße. According to the police, the boy had accidentally bumped into the man. The man left the scene directly after. On Friday, a 44-year-old woman and a 60-year-old man attacked a family in Wrangelstraße. The police took both into custody but released them again. On Saturday, a stranger threatened a family in a supermarket in Louis-Lewin-Straße. According to the police, the stranger insulted and threatened the 25-year-old father of the family, his 28-year-old wife and their one-year-old child. He managed to flee. Source: nd-akutell

Berlin social administration cuts funding for women centre

The Berlin Senate Social Administration has cut funding for an association that has been recognised for decades. The Frieda Women’s Centre had “repeatedly failed to fulfil its notification and verification obligations towards the Senate Administration over a long period of time, or only did so with considerable delay”, as announced by the spokesperson for the Social Welfare Department. The association did not comment on the matter when asked. In the past, it has faced accusations that leading members have made antisemitic and anti-Zionist statements and taken part in pro-Palestinian events. Source: msn

Berlin: major daycare centre strikes this week

The trade union ver.di has announced another daycare centre strike in Berlin next week. Teachers in around 280 municipal daycare centres have been called to strike on Thursday, 27 June. The union wants to further increase the pressure in the ongoing wage dispute. Today the situation in Berlin’s daycare centres will also be discussed by the Committee for Education, Youth and Family in the House of Representatives. In addition to the parents’ initiative “Unicorn seeks education”, a ver.di representative will also be speaking. In recent weeks, there have been repeated strikes at daycare centres in Berlin. Source: berliner-zeitung

 

NEWS FROM GERMANY

Anti-Muslim attacks rose considerably in 2023

The number of anti-Muslim attacks, threats and discrimination more than doubled in 2023 compared to the previous year, according to a report from the Alliance against Islamophobia and Islamophobia (Claim). The document shows 1,926 attacks were registered nationwide in 2023 – an average of more than five per day. Claim director Rima Hanano sees the shift to the right by the democratic parties as partly responsible. Case numbers from regional reporting and advice centres as well as from the 2023 statistics on politically motivated crime were taken into account for the situation report. The number of unreported cases is expected to be quite high. Source: nd-aktuell

“We will defend the welfare state”

In an interview with the public-service broadcaster ARD, Chancelor Olaf Scholz (SPD) affirmed, despite the traffic-light coalition government´s struggle over the 2025 federal budget, to defend the welfare state. The federal budget currently has a shortfall of around 25 billion euros. Finance Minister and FDP leader Christian Lindner insists that the debt brake should be adhered to and thus demands significant cuts in the budgets of several ministries, especially the social affairs department. Scholz expects the budget to be passed next month. The Chancellor left open the question of whether an emergency situation could ultimately be declared due to the high costs of the billions in support for Ukraine. Source: tagesschau

Fewer people than expected live in Berlin and Germany

The population in Berlin as of 15 May 2022 of 3,596,999 people. This figure was announced by the Federal Statistical Office for the 2022 census. This is 128,651 fewer inhabitants than previously assumed – and therefore comes in way below the expectation. Not only in Berlin, but across Germany, the population has also grown less starkly in recent years than previously assumed. However, this was around 1.4 million fewer inhabitants than previously assumed on the basis of the official census. There were also above-average deviations for the foreign population. According to the 2022 census, around 10.9 million foreigners were living in Germany on 15 May. This is almost one million fewer than previously assumed. Source: rbb

Germany announces a new military service policy

The German government wants to increase voluntary military service and mandatory German army (Bundeswehr) participation. A document outlining that policy explains that while Germany will not reintroduce conscription – scrapped in 2011 – the country will adopt “a new model that primarily relies on voluntary participation, but also includes mandatory elements if necessary”. Under the new model, young men in Germany would be sent a questionnaire about their health and willingness to serve in the Bundeswehr. Women would also be sent the questionnaire, but would not be obliged to fill it out. It is still unclear whether the new rules will only apply to people with a German passport. Source: iamexpat

Most German federal states support introducing soft drink tax

Germany’s Minister for Food and Agriculture Cem Özdemir (Greens) wants to introduce a soft drink tax; nine federal states have now said they would support introducing it. Brandenburg, Bremen, Hamburg, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Lower Saxony, Rhineland-Palatinate, Saxony, Thuringia and Saarland have agreed on supporting a nationwide tax on drinks with a high sugar content. Such support is expected to give Özdemir’s policy proposal a boost. The federal minister has long wanted to implement legislation in Germany based on the UK government’s Soft Drinks Industry Levy or “sugar tax” introduced in 2018. Source: iamexpat