Senior AfD Member Vows To Ban Islam Across Europe, Starting From Istanbul's Bosporus
15 February 2018
Islamophobia Watch
While continuing to make offensive comments about Islam, a senior member of
German far-right AfD party pledged to ban Islam across Europe, starting from
the Bosporus in Istanbul
senior member of the anti-Islam, right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD)
vowed that once the party comes to power, they would ban Islam starting from
the Bosporus in Istanbul -- the exact point where the European continent
begins.
Speaking to his AfD supporters on Saturday in Eisleben, Germany, Bjoern Hoecke
said: 'Once we come into power, we will enforce what is necessary for us to
live our lives freely. We will issue the directive that after crossing the
Bosporus, the three great M's: Mohammed, Muezzin and minaret are over, dear
friends!'
Hoecke also said Muslims were lovers of war because their Prophet Mohammed was
a general. 'That's why we have to take Islam seriously as a threat,' he said.
He further claimed in his one-hour speech cheered by a passionate crowd that
he was not an enemy of Islam and he was 'actually tolerant;' however, Islam
did not belong to Europe. Hoecke did not elaborate on how the AfD would
legally ban the religion in Germany and other European countries as leaders in
German politics.
In January 2017, Hoecke scandalized the European country when he attacked the
monument commemorating the mass murder of Jews and said Germans should be more
'positive' about their Nazi past. 'Germans are the only people in the world
who plant a monument of shame in the heart of their capital,' he told
supporters in Dresden at the time.
In a country that has long struggled to deal with its collective guilt over
the Nazi era and the Holocaust, the taboo-breaking new extremists have
reawakened deep fears about rising xenophobia and race hate.
Berlin daily Tagesspiegel said: 'The worst thing is that, the more AfD
officials say such things, the more quickly they become normal. The outrage
wears off, and at some point there will no longer be an outcry.'
Robert Vehrkampf of think tank the Bertelsmann Foundation called the AfD a
generally right-wing populist party that 'breaks taboos in a calculated way to
reach right-wing extremist voters.'
Founded more than four years ago as a euro-skeptic party, the AfD has since
lurched to the right, adopting a staunchly anti-Islam and anti-foreigner party
platform. The AfD has enjoyed a surge of support in the wake of Chancellor
Angela Merkel's controversial decision two years ago to open the nation's
borders to refugees stranded in Hungary.
In the September general election, the far-right AfD protest party siphoned
millions of votes from all mainstream parties. Sitting in the glass-domed
lower house of the German Bundestag for the first time were lawmakers of the
far-right AfD, the anti-immigration, anti-Islam and anti-Merkel protest party
that is at the heart of the crisis. Its entry into parliament in the Sept. 24
elections with almost 13 percent of the vote cost Merkel's conservatives and
other mainstream parties dearly, further fragmenting the party political
landscape and making it harder to gain a parliamentary majority.