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Editorial2025-01-14 11:00:00

Germany, the 'alarm' in the middle of Europe

Shkruar nga Dritan Haxhiraj

 

Germany, the 'alarm' in the middle of Europe
Alice Weidel /

A one-way deportation ticket, dated February 23, 2025, the day of the German federal elections, placed in the mailboxes of approximately 30,000 people who have immigrated to Germany...

We grew up and were educated in the Europe of Konrad Adenauer and those German politicians who gave everything for Democracy. We never thought, at least our generation educated in the West, that the news that came was true. On my visit at the end of 2024, the Germany that I had visited before scared me, shocked me.

It shocked me so much that the History of World War II movies seem close to reality to me. Germany was changing, people were afraid to speak out. Arrogance was sitting cross-legged in the heart of Europe.

What is happening in Germany? What is happening in Europe?

Are we close to the scenarios of '1933' in German politics?

Germany, the 'alarm' in the middle of Europe

What is documented in these photos is incredible, in German cities, in the heart of Europe. The initiative is dated February 23, 2025, the day of the German federal elections.

A provocative, serious and barbaric discussion, which has landed in the homes of those with a migrant background.

A one-way deportation ticket, dated February 23, 2025, the day of the German federal elections, placed in the mailboxes of approximately 30,000 people who have immigrated to Germany, or who are of migrant origin.

This is the latest provocation signed by some sections of the German far-right AfD circle that is causing discussion.

This is what people with a migrant background in the Karlsruhe area found in their mail.

The sentence above the ticket, where the passenger is listed as an "illegal immigrant," says: "Only re-emigration can save Germany."

A QR code then takes you to the Karlsruhe AfD website, where you can download the ticket and read the party's demands, accompanied by a link for donations. The same tickets were also distributed over the weekend in Riesa, at the far-right party congress that officially launched leader Alice Weidel in the race for chancellorship.

Karlsruhe police have launched an investigation into suspected hate speech.

The local section of the party, however, defends itself by reiterating that the initiatives are "legitimate and in accordance with the law."

Quo Vadis Deutschland?/ Pamphlet

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