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Germany: Nine Turkish immigrants die in house fire
By Dietmar Henning
12 February 2008
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Less than one day after nine Turkish immigrants died in a house
fire in Ludwigshafen, Social Democratic Party (SPD) Chairman Kurt
Beck claimed there were no indications that the blaze was the
result of a racist attack. On Thursday, February 7, Beck, who
is also state premier of Rhineland Palatinate where Ludwigshafen
is situated, defended his claim, saying it was supported by what
was known so far from the investigation.
The fire in the four-storey building broke out just after 4
oclock in the afternoon of Sunday, February 2. Although
it was the middle of the day, and the fire brigade arrived at
the scene after just a few minutes, it was too late to save five
children and four adults, including a pregnant woman. Sixty others
were also injured. In addition to the 52 inhabitants of the house,
a number of visitors were in the building watching a passing carnival.
The fire spread via the wooden stairway, quickly reaching all
floors, cutting off any retreat for those in the old building.
A horrific scene then unfolded at the front of the building; with
whole families pushing forward on the balconies, some jumping
through windows because there was no escape route. An 11-month-old
baby, thrown from the third floor into the arms of a policeman,
was caught without sustaining any injuries.
When Beck visited the scene the following day, and claimed
that there was no indication racism had played a role in the tragedy,
the investigation had not even started, since the burnt-out building
was closed off because of the danger of collapse. But anyone who
has followed developments in Germany in recent years would recognise
thatbased on the exceptionally rapid spread of the firethere
were also grounds for suspecting a racially motivated arson attack.
The building was inhabited exclusively by families of Turkish
origin. On the ground floor, a Turkish voluntary group operated
a café named Kale (castle)a meeting place
for many people of Turkish origin who lived in the neighbourhood.
The Turkish media immediately drew comparisons to the 1993
fire in Solingen, in which five Turkish women and girls were burned
to death when neo-Nazis set fire to the building where they lived.
That arson attack had been preceded by a witch-hunt of asylum-seekers,
which culminated in the virtual abolition of the right to asylum.
The xenophobic campaign had encouraged the perpetrators of the
Solingen atrocity.
During the recent elections in Hesse, the campaign against
criminal foreigners conducted by state premier Roland
Koch (Christian Democratic Union, CDU) has had a similar effect.
Many of the 2.5 million people of Turkish origin living in Germany
felt they were being attacked and defamed by Kochs campaign,
which was supported by Chancellor Angela Merkel. According to
immigration researcher Haci-Halil Uslucan, feelings were
very heated as a result of the strongly polarised election
campaign.
Quoting Faruk Sen of the Centre for Turkish Studies, the newspaper
Zaman reported that last years passage of new immigration
laws by Germanys grand coalition government of the Christian
Democrats and Social Democrats had left many Turkish immigrants
feeling they faced intensified discrimination. Under the new legislation,
relatives of Turkish immigrants can only come to join their family
in Germany if they can demonstrate sufficient knowledge of German.
Immigrants from the US, Japan, Israel and other countries, Zaman
noted, do not face such rules.
Federal Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble (CDU) has
instead blamed the Turkish press for the outpouring of distrust
and anger on the part of many Turkish immigrants following the
tragedy in Ludwigshafen. He called their reports about a possible
racist background to the fire groundless speculation.
The insecurity people felt, Schäuble told TV news programme
Heute Journal, shows how irresponsible some of the media
in Turkey has been.
Schäuble then insulted Turkeys ambassador to Berlin,
Mehmet Irtemcelik, with the words: Sometimes, one must even
teach ambassadors manners. Irtemcelik had called it strange
that German politiciansmeaning Kurt Beckhad excluded
any racist background to the fire disaster before the possible
causes had even been examined.
Schäuble, who was in Turkey at the time of the fire, agreed
to the Turkish governments request to send its own experts
to investigate the Ludwigshafen fire, while at the same time accusing
Turkey of showing distrust in relation to our police authorities.
The Christian Democratic parliamentary faction vice chair,
Wolfgang Bosbach, described the headlines in the Turkish media
as intolerable. He said he had no objections to Turkish
investigators wanting to draw up their own picture of the situation
locally, but it must be clear: In Germany, it is the German
authorities who investigate matters. Their Turkish colleagues
have observer status, but nothing more.
Complaints also came from the police trade union and the SPD.
SPD parliamentary deputy Lale Akgün, who has lived in Germany
for 45 years, said that the presence of Turkish observers was
at the cost of the confidence in the German police.
Finally, Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan travelled to
Ludwigshafen to calm the situation and show support for the German
government. Speaking at the scene of the fire, he called for calm,
praised the great dedication of the German police and affirmed
German-Turkish friendship. Erdogan, who is seeking Turkish membership
in the European Union, is interested in maintaining good relations
with the German government.
The actual cause of the fire is still unknown. Authorities
investigating the blaze were only able to begin their investigation
in the nearly completely burned-out building on Wednesday, February
6. But indications are growing that the fire could very well be
due to a racist arson attack.
According to statements by two young girls, a man with black
hair, who spoke German, ignited a little stick with a pocket
lighter and then threw it beside a pram in the corridor.
The police are presently trying to produce a composite sketch
of the possible arsonist with the use of Identi-Kit software.
This will depend, however, on how well the eight- and nine-year-old
girls recover, since both have been traumatised by the fire.
Bayram Türkoglu, a leading regional figure in the Turkish
community, has told the press that three days before the fire,
one of the families living in the building received a threatening
call saying, Its your turn now.
Like many hundreds of others, Türkoglu came on Wednesday
to the scene of the disaster in order to express his condolences
and demonstrate solidarity with the families of the nine victims.
Many laid flowers, hanging Turkish flags on the fence. Each day,
hundreds still come to show their sympathy.
According to the Turkish newspaper Zaman, citing relatives
of the victims in Gaziantep in southeast Turkey, the family of
the buildings owner had been threatened by young German
right-wing extremists. However, the family did not take the threats
seriously.
The police in Ludwigshafen claim they know nothing about such
threats, and there is a great deal of speculation. However, the
police have confirmed that in the mid-1990s, there had been a
bar in the building whose patrons belonged to the right-wing
spectrum. Some newspapers have run reports about it being
a skinhead meeting place. In the following years, various other
individuals and predominantly Turkish cultural associations rented
out the ground floor.
According to the police, in August 2006, Molotov cocktails
were thrown into the building, without any culprits ever being
caught. In addition, the word hate (Hass
in German) has been painted twice on the outside wallwith
the last two letters written in runic form, as used by Hitlers
notorious Waffen SS. According to the police, the graffiti has
been there for some time.
The police have also confirmed that anti-Turkish graffiti exists
on a building near the scene of the fire, which has been reported
in several Turkish newspapers. But police said it was from more
than a year ago.
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