Germany welcomes Muslims to leave now

 

 

Berlin, Germany. Migrants arriving in German have a number of challenges including housing, jobs, and in general survival related issues. But a new problem will soon be tossed on their plate if one faction gets its way politically in Germany; the need to assimilate.

 

Muslim refugees heading to Germany must accept the German way of life or leave, otherwise there were “better places” for them to go, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in a discussion panel in Berlin on Wednesday. Migrants who do not like the German way of living must be told “you have made the wrong decision, there are better places in the world to live under Islamic law than Europe.” said Schaeuble, a member of Angela Merkel’s cabinet.

 

This past month, a member of the executive committee of Merkel’s Christian Democrats Jens Spahn called for an “Islam law” to regulate mosques in Germany. Spahn also called for language tests for imams, adding it is important for preachers at mosques to deliver sermons in German. Authorities in Germany must “know what happens in mosques,” he said

 

Recent steps were further taken to shock Germany’s Muslim population into assimilation or departure, including a ban on teen or pre teen marriages with Germany’s child protective services now authorized to bodily seperate spouses and place brides in state custody.

 

Anti-Muslim hate crimes have risen in Germany since the arrival of around 890,000 asylum seekers in 2015. This move, coupled with widely publicised cases of refugees being accused of rape and sexual assault led to a backlash last year from Germany’s far-right, who capitalised on anti-migrant sentiment.

 

According to a recent poll by Chatham House, 55 percent of people polled in ten European countries said they were in favour of an end to all further migration from Muslim countries.

 

The poll of 10,000 people shed light on the widespread level of public anxiety over Muslim immigration with only 20 percent of people disagreeing with Muslim immigration bans. Experts further fear the issue is causing EU disentegration and collapse of member states economies, from the burden on social services mass migration is costing.