BERLIN, May 24: A spate of racist attacks in Germany in the run-up to the World Cup has the host nation fearing for its hard-won reputation for tolerance.

The alarm was sounded last week by a former government spokesman, Uwe-Karsten Heye, who said non-whites were not safe in some areas in the former East Germany near Berlin.

“There are small and mid-sized towns in Brandenburg and elsewhere where I would advise anyone with a different skin colour not to go,” said Heye, referring to the state surrounding the capital.

“They may not leave with their lives.”

Heye, now a spokesman for an anti-racism lobby was not alone in warning of xenophobic pockets in the former communist East, where the country's neo-Nazi party has found a following among unemployed youths.

The Africa Council, a group for expatriates, plans to publish a “No-Go-Area” brochure listing clubs, bars and restaurants in and around Berlin which black football fans should give a wide berth.

But politicians and football authorities said Heye's statement scored an own goal for a country, which has painstakingly confronted its Nazi past to earn a reputation for political correctness.

At the weekend the debate took another turn when a German politician of Turkish origin was beaten and slashed with a broken bottle in Lichtenberg, a working class part of Berlin known as a neo-Nazi stronghold.

The two men who attacked Giyasettin Sayan, a regional parliamentarian for the neo-communist Left party, called him a “dirty foreigner”, police said.

Sayan's party chief in the Berlin assembly, Stefan Liebich, said the attack justified last week's warnings, while a politician of Indian origin said he was too scared to use public transport in Berlin at night.

The premier of Brandenburg, Matthias Platzeck, on Sunday admitted that xenophobia was a problem in the state.

“We have to accept that it is not a problem that can be resolved from one day to the next,” he said.

“We have gone through a phase where we minimised and denied the problem, where we said: 'My God, if we speak about this openly we will hurt our image and then nobody will come here.'”

In April, an Ethiopian engineer was beaten into a coma in Potsdam, outside Berlin, by two men who called him a “dirty nigger” last month.

And in early January, a 12-year-old boy of Ethiopian origin was attacked by a group of neo-Nazi youths who forced him at gun-point to lick their boots in the eastern town of Magdeburg.

They have been jailed by a judge who said the colour of the victim's skin was “the sole reason” for the attack.

The debate about whether racism is on the rise and the damage it could do has peaked less than three weeks before the World Cup kicks off in Munich on June 9, with about one million foreign fans expected to attend the tournament.

The government has been running a campaign to promote Germany as an open, friendly society in the hope that those who come will return one day.

The leader of the Greens, Claudia Roth, said there was no point in hushing the debate for fear of scaring off foreigners as recent events spoke for themselves.

“It is not talking about the far-right that threatens to harm our reputation but the very facts themselves.

“These are not lone incidents, but that we have a widespread, deep-seated problem with right-wing extremist violence in our country.”

At the weekend, Bild newspaper leaked an extract of a government report stating that the number of neo-Nazis in Germany had grown from 3,800 in 2004 to 4,200 last year.

On Monday, Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble released statistics saying that the number of violent crimes attributed to the far-right had risen by 23 percent in 2005.

Wilhelm Heitmeyer, a sociologist at the University of Bielefeld, blamed the poor state of the economy and the frustration it created for animosity towards foreigners.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Doctor attacked
09 Jun, 2026

Doctor attacked

AN act of reprehensible violence has shaken the medical community. On Saturday, an employee of the Provincial Civil...
AJK flare-up
Updated 09 Jun, 2026

AJK flare-up

The situation started deteriorating after a trader affiliated with the JAAC was reportedly shot in an altercation with law-enforcers.
Fault lines
09 Jun, 2026

Fault lines

THE April 8 ceasefire that halted hostilities between Israel and Iran has encountered its most serious test yet....
Soft on traders
08 Jun, 2026

Soft on traders

THE Fixed Tax Asaan Scheme for traders with an annual turnover of up to Rs200m has been designed as a ‘pragmatic...
Ceasefire in name
Updated 08 Jun, 2026

Ceasefire in name

Both sides accuse the other of violating the truce that was supposed to halt the conflict in April, yet neither appears willing to abandon negotiations altogether.
Damaged childhoods
08 Jun, 2026

Damaged childhoods

CHILD abuse is so prevalent that the UN ranked Pakistan as the least safe country for children. Even so, more than...