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Debate over Race And Policing Roils Start of German Election Year


German riot police officers take their possitions near the Hauptbahnhof before New Year celebrations for 2017 in Cologne, Germany, Dec. 31, 2016.
German riot police officers take their possitions near the Hauptbahnhof before New Year celebrations for 2017 in Cologne, Germany, Dec. 31, 2016.

A new acronym coined by German police to describe troublemaking migrants from North Africa has sharpened a national debate over immigration and crime as the country recovers from a deadly attack and gears up for a vital election this year.

Police in Cologne said this week they had prevented trouble on New Year's Eve by screening some 650 'Nafris' – an abbreviation of 'Nordafrikanische Intensivtaeter' or 'North African Repeat Offenders' - and removing 190 from the city center. Ninety-two were detained.

The operation followed intense criticism of the police for failing to protect hundreds of women from being sexually molested, mostly by North African men, at the start of 2016.

But the 'Nafri' tag has set off a row, with some politicians on the left denouncing it as racist while defenders argue it is just one more acronym in a language filled with difficult compound nouns.

"It's bizarre and so typically German to be arguing about the word 'Nafri' instead of saying 'fortunately there were no problems'," said Thomas Jaeger, political scientist at Cologne University.

He said the row was "grist to the mill" of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party as it prepares for an election in May in North Rhine-Westphalia, the state that includes Cologne, and for a federal election in September.

"Police are being accused of racial profiling. What are they supposed to do? Screen all young women or grannies?" Jaeger said. Racial profiling is not legal in Germany, but police have powers to screen anyone seen as a potential security threat. Security and immigration are both key issues as Chancellor Angela Merkel prepares to run for a fourth term, facing intense pressure for letting in more than a million migrants in the past two years.

A failed asylum-seeker killed 12 people by ploughing a truck through a crowded Berlin Christmas market last month, emboldening critics who argue that the mass influx from countries such as Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan is exposing the country to terrorism.

Last year's Cologne sex attacks helped revitalize the AfD, which scored a series of electoral successes in 2016 and even beat Merkel's conservatives into third place in one state.

Ahead of the May 14 state vote in North Rhine-Westphalia, the anti-immigrant party is polling over 10 percent in Germany's most populous state. It also threatens to erode Merkel's support in the national election.

AfD leader Frauke Petry weighed into the latest controversy with a sarcastic tweet, saying: "Nafris were probably on the way to join the church choir."

The German interior ministry said 'Nafri' is not a term it uses and Cologne police chief Juergen Mathies said it was "unfortunate" that a term employed internally had been used in public. The police union said it was simply an acronym and notracist.

A Forsa opinion poll for RTL TV found 79 percent believed Cologne police acted appropriately on New Year's Eve.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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