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Thursday April 18, 2024

Germany fetes 25 years of unity with call for refugee welcome

Germany on Saturday celebrated 25 years since its joyful reunification, with its leaders urging the nation to muster the same strength and solidarity to face a record refugee influx.The silver anniversary of the day communist East Germany and the capitalist West reunited as one country comes with Europe’s top economy

By our correspondents
October 04, 2015
Germany on Saturday celebrated 25 years since its joyful reunification, with its leaders urging the nation to muster the same strength and solidarity to face a record refugee influx.
The silver anniversary of the day communist East Germany and the capitalist West reunited as one country comes with Europe’s top economy standing at a crossroads.
Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck, both of whom grew up under communism, attended ceremonies in the business capital Frankfurt with the resonant slogan “Overcoming Borders”.
In the keynote speech, Gauck focused on the refugee crisis and called on Germans to recapture the same can-do spirit that gripped the country in the heady months between the fall of the Berlin Wall and the remarriage of east and west.
”Today we celebrate the courage and self-confidence of that time. Let us use this memory as a bridge,” said Gauck, who was a dissident pastor in East Germany.
”In 1990 too, there was the legitimate question: ‘Are we up to this challenge?’ Then too, there was no example from history to follow. And nevertheless, millions of people took on the national task of unification and made Germany into a country that was more than the sum of its parts.”
Merkel, who will mark 10 years in power in November, is grappling with the arrival this year of up to one million people fleeing war and hardship.
Buoyed by a robust economy and job market, voters have largely backed her policy of extending help.
Volunteers have greeted hundreds of thousands with open arms and mountains of donated essentials in moving scenes that Merkel has said made her “proud of this country”.
However as the numbers have grown, Merkel’s popularity has slipped as she comes under fire from critics at home and abroad for her willing acceptance of the burden on Europe.
Merkel on Saturday said the migrant crisis represented an epochal test for the European Union.
”Twenty-five years on, we are facing great challenges with the issue of refugees,” she told reporters in Frankfurt.
”Now too, we Germans will not be able to solve the problem on our own but only with Europe, with a fair division of the burden, and with the rest of the world.”
She said earlier in her weekly podcast that this must include a range of measures including a pan-European effort to protect external borders, development aid and conflict resolution in the refugees’ countries of origin, and smoother distribution of newcomers within the EU.
Some countries have resisted Berlin’s bid for the mantle of European leadership, however, with Hungary’s hardline Prime Minister Viktor Orban even accusing Merkel of “moral imperialism”.
Gauck expressed understanding for the fears of eastern European countries that do not have experience in integrating foreigners, unlike that acquired over generations in the west.
”We have seen that the change in attitudes toward refugees and immigrants can only come through a long, and also contentious, learning process,” he said.