Xenophobia Peaks in Five European Nations

Published: 20 December 2001 y., Thursday
The European Monitoring Centre on Racism and Xenophobia (EUMC) came to this grave conclusion when it published its annual report for the year 2000. "The worrying thing is that not just racist violence, but also racial discrimination is growing rapidly all over Europe", said Beate Winkler, Director of the EUMC on Tuesday in the European Parliament in Brussels as the report was made public. Increasing racial violence, anti-Semitism and discrimination of people based on their skin colour and religion – the annual report makes note of this and points a finger in particular towards five EU heavyweights: Germany, France, Great Britain, Sweden and Spain. In Germany, racist motivated crimes have soared by 33 percent as compared to last year. The news is worse for Great Britain – xenophobic acts there have doubled. But the EUMC report makes clear that racial discrimination is not confined to a handful of singled-out European countries. One of the reasons - the at times completely differing interpretations in countries of what amounts to a racist motivated crime. In many European countries, incidents of xenophobic attacks are seldom handled by the police as clear-cut racist crimes. That’s why one can’t automatically conclude that more racism exists in countries, which book a comparatively high number of xenophobic crimes. The country with the most shocking track record of racist violence according to the report is Spain, where unprecedented brutal attacks on foreigners took place last year. The EUMC report makes particular mention of the Spanish village of El Ejido, where Spanish villagers assaulted and hounded Moroccan emigrants through the streets for four days.There has already been a marked increase in racist attacks on Muslims after September 11 –both verbal as well as physical.
Šaltinis: dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Debate on immigration and the environment in the EU

This Saturday, 24 April, the Carlos de Amberes Foundation is hosting two conferences of European experts on the environment and sustainability and immigration policies in the EU, organised by the Allianz Cultural Foundation in the context of the Allianz Alumni Academy. more »

Mumbai's Oberoi hotel to reopen

The Trident-Oberoi Hotel in Mumbai to reopen, following renovations after militant attacks in 2008 more »

Stranded tourists shelter in Harlem

Fresh from their wedding in Jamaica, British tourists Siobhan and David Monteith never thought for a minute that a volcano would interrupt their honeymoon. more »

Manila's bicycle message

The streets of Manila filled with a colourful display on wheels, just days before the world celebrates Earth Day’s 40th anniversary. more »

World's youngest king celebrated

Tens of thousands of Ugandans flocked to the hilltop palace of Africa’s youngest tribal ruler for two days of noisy parties marking a decade in power for the 18-year-old king. more »

Ancient arts performance in Taiwan

Colourful warriors leap across the stage at the 6th annual Songjiang Battle Array, in Neimen, southern Taiwan. more »

Product safety update

Consumers benefit from greater use of European product safety alert system and more effective market surveillance. more »

Migrant integration: Commission announces a new EU strategy and presents the third 'Handbook' at the Zaragoza Ministerial Conference

Representatives from all Member States are gathering for two days in Zaragoza from 15 to 16 April to discuss how migrant integration can become a driver for social cohesion in the EU. more »

1 million signatures for popular democracy

The much heralded "citizens initiative" to change EU laws has been given a cautious welcome by MEPs. Under the scheme - a major innovation of the Lisbon treaty - a million people can back a plan to introduce European legislation. more »

Michel Platini: Football and local authorities working together will score on social inclusion

Football shares Europe's values of integration, solidarity and social inclusion, and can play a significant role in helping the EU to promote them, especially at the local level where clubs are part of their local communities. more »