logo
Germany's Merz blames migration for 'imported' rising anti-Semitism

Germany's Merz blames migration for 'imported' rising anti-Semitism

Yahoo14 hours ago

Chancellor Friedrich Merz has said migration is a significant factor behind the rise of anti-Semitism in Germany, calling it a "terrible challenge" for the country.
"We have a sort of imported anti-Semitism with the big numbers of migrants we have within the last 10 years," Merz said late on Thursday in an interview with US broadcaster Fox News.
The phrase "imported anti-Semitism" has stirred controversy in Germany. It suggests that anti-Semitism is mainly a result of immigration, a view often echoed in right-wing circles.
Critics say the term unfairly targets Muslims and migrants, while downplaying anti-Semitism within broader German society.
Anti-Semitic incidents in Germany surged sharply in 2024, according to figures published by a monitoring organization on Wednesday.
The report from the Federal Association of Departments for Research and Information on Antisemitism (RIAS) documented 8,627 anti-Semitic incidents — a 77% increase compared to the previous year.
Of these, 5,857 cases were classified as "anti-Semitism related to Israel" - meaning incidents in which Jews living in Germany are held responsible for the actions of the Israeli government, or where Israel's right to exist is disputed.
The figure was more than twice as many as recorded in 2023.
A total of 544 cases were attributed to right-wing extremist views, a record since RIAS began documenting cases nationwide in 2020.
"We are doing everything we can to bring these numbers down," Merz said, adding that Germany was prosecuting those who break the law.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Judge Shoots Down Trump's New Plot to Keep Foreign Students Out of Harvard
Judge Shoots Down Trump's New Plot to Keep Foreign Students Out of Harvard

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Judge Shoots Down Trump's New Plot to Keep Foreign Students Out of Harvard

A federal judge has blocked President Trump's latest effort to prevent international students from studying at Harvard University. The president's latest move in his war against the Ivy League school saw him sign a proclamation that claimed that letting foreign nationals study at Harvard is 'detrimental to the interests of the United States,' because 'Harvard's conduct has rendered it an unsuitable destination for foreign students and researchers.' Hours after Harvard's lawyers filed a complaint against the proclamation Thursday, U.S. District Judge Allison Burroughs issued a temporary order which blocked anyone from 'implementing, instituting, maintaining, enforcing, or giving force or effect to the Presidential Proclamation,' after agreeing with Harvard that it would cause 'immediate and irreparable injury' to the university before courts could properly review the case. Last month, Burroughs issued a similar order that blocked the Trump administration's previous attempt to ban foreign students from enrolling at Harvard, which was also extended after the university claimed the president's latest proclamation was an attempt to illegally bypass the judge's earlier ruling. 'The Proclamation denies thousands of Harvard's students the right to come to this country to pursue their education and follow their dreams, and it denies Harvard the right to teach them. Without its international students, Harvard is not Harvard,' the university claimed in its legal filing. Harvard President Alan Garber claimed the move was retaliation from Trump after the university refused to allow the government to control the curriculum, governance, and ideology of its students and faculty members. Garber previously claimed the institution will never stray from its 'core, legally-protected principles,' even if ordered to by the federal government. 'International students and scholars make outstanding contributions inside and outside of our classrooms and laboratories, fulfilling our mission of excellence in countless ways,' he added in a letter to the student body on Thursday night. 'We will celebrate them, support them, and defend their interests as we continue to assert our Constitutional rights.' In a statement on Thursday, White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson called Harvard 'a hotbed of anti-American, anti-Semitic, pro-terrorist agitators.' 'Harvard's behavior has jeopardized the integrity of the entire U.S. student and exchange visitor visa system and risks compromising national security,' she added, Reuters reports. 'Now it must face the consequences of its actions.' Harvard has denied the claims.

Trump Says He's ‘Totally' Focused on Policy … While Calling Reporters to Bash Musk
Trump Says He's ‘Totally' Focused on Policy … While Calling Reporters to Bash Musk

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump Says He's ‘Totally' Focused on Policy … While Calling Reporters to Bash Musk

President Donald Trump is insisting that he's not mad. The breakup with Elon Musk is not causing him to lose any sleep, and he's definitely not checking his socials multiple times a day. The insistence from the president that he is unbothered and unconcerned about his blowup with the billionaire would be much more convincing if Trump hadn't spent all of Friday morning calling virtually every news anchor he knows to complain about him. Over the course of the day, Trump called CNN's Dana Bash, Fox News' Bret Baier, ABC News' Jonathan Karl, and CBS News' Robert Costa to talk about — or insist he doesn't care to talk about — Thursday's blowup with Musk. 'I'm not even thinking about Elon, he's got a problem, the poor guy's got a problem' Trump reportedly told Bash, who relayed to the network that the conversation had been short. The president made similar comments to Karl, descriming Musk as 'the man who has lost his mind.' 'Trump did not, however, seem angry or even concerned about the feud,' Karl wrote on X. 'As for reports that there is going to be a Trump/Musk call scheduled for today, Trump told me he is 'not particularly' interested in talking to Musk although he says Musk wants to talk to him.' Trump told Baier that 'Elon has totally lost it,' and that he's not worried about threats of a third party after Musk expressed interest in starting one during his lengthy posting spree on Thursday. In his phone call with Costa, Trump said he was not worried about Musk's defection and was insead 'totally' focused on policy matters. 'That's all I focus on,' Trump said. 'I don't focus on anything else.' (Trump posted later on Friday that had just finished inspecting the site of an opulent ballroom he plans to build at the White House.) The president insisted to the anchors he spoke to that he does not want to speak to Musk at the moment, who had been a focal point of his 2024 campaign and early presidency, even as allies of both men attempt to broker a detente. According to an anonymous White House official who spoke to The New York Times, Trump has also decided to sell the red Tesla he purchased in a transparent bid to help Musk's flagging stock value earlier this year. Other sources told the Times that the president has been referencing recent reports about Musk's frequent use of ketamine and other drugs, suggesting they may be influencing his current behavior. Rolling Stone reported on Thursday that Trump administration officials have not taken the possibility of retaliation against Musk — namely by cancelling lucrative government contracts with his companies or reopening oversight investigations — off of the table. 'THIS ADMINISTRATION COULD ALWAYS START THE INVESTIGATIONS AGAIN,' messaged one senior Trump appointee. Trump did not stop and talk to reporters as he left the White House on Friday. More from Rolling Stone Bromance Is Dead: Splitsville for Besties Trump and Musk Trump and His Team Tease Vengeance Against Elon as Feud Goes Nuclear Trump-Musk Feud Explodes as Elon Alleges Trump Is in Epstein Files Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence

US power grid may be at risk from Chinese solar power inverters, fmr. NSA official warns: Report
US power grid may be at risk from Chinese solar power inverters, fmr. NSA official warns: Report

American Military News

timean hour ago

  • American Military News

US power grid may be at risk from Chinese solar power inverters, fmr. NSA official warns: Report

A former National Security Agency intelligence analyst has suggested China may be placing devices in 'strategic places' after mysterious communication devices were recently discovered in Chinese-produced solar power inverters used in U.S. electric grids. Two sources recently told Reuters that U.S. experts who check for potential security issues with equipment used for power grids have discovered that rogue communication devices not included in the official documents for the products have been discovered in Chinese solar power inverters. One of the anonymous sources told Reuters that cellular radios and other undocumented communication devices have also been discovered in certain batteries from various suppliers in China over the past nine months. According to Reuters, the two sources explained that the rogue components discovered in the Chinese solar power inverters allow undocumented communication channels that could potentially be used to remotely bypass firewalls and cause significant harm. Rocky Cole, a former National Security Agency intelligence analyst, told Fox News that it was 'very conceivable that China was using the solar power inverters to secure access to America's infrastructure. READ MORE: China labels US, Japanese destroyers as 'enemy vessels' Cole told Fox News, 'It very much fits into the model of China implanting hardware in American critical infrastructure for the purpose of planning cyberattacks against the United States in the event of, say, a conflict with Taiwan or something along those lines.' While the sources did not tell Reuters which Chinese companies were responsible for the production of the solar power inverters or batteries discovered with communication devices, Fox News reported that Chinese companies are required by law to provide assistance to China's intelligence agencies when needed. 'There are communications devices in these really strategic places that you can imagine could theoretically be used to disrupt U.S. commerce in the event of some sort of conflict,' Cole stated. 'It's difficult not to view Chinese-made hardware in the realm of critical infrastructure as a national security threat in my mind.' In response to the allegations regarding the Chinese-produced equipment, Liu Pengyu, a Chinese Embassy spokesperson, told Fox News, 'The goal of China's pursuit of development is to enable its people to live a better life. We oppose the presumption of guilt under unclear facts, the generalization of the concept of national security, and the distortion and smear of China's achievements in the field of energy infrastructure.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store