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|
Schroeder said the
“bitter defeat” in NRW “throws into question the political basis
for the continuation of our work. (Reuters) |
Additional
Reporting By Ahmed Al-Matboli, IOL Correspondent
FRANKFURT, May 23,
2005 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – In an unhappy outcome to
German Muslims in the largest regional state of North Rhine-Westphalia
(NRW), the conservative anti-hijab Christian Democratic Union (CDU)
won state elections Sunday, May 22, triggering a decision to hold snap
general election across Germany in the autumn.
The CDU dealt
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's Social Democratic Party (SPD) another
heavy blow after winning over NRW, which continued a stronghold for
Schroeder's party for 39 years, reports IslamOnline.net’s
correspondent.
The party won
44.8% of the votes, against SDP's 37.1% and 6.2% for their ruling
coalition partner the Greens' Party, almost the same percentage won by
the Democrats expected future partners, Free Democratic Party.
Although all
opinion polls showed that the SPD would lose the NRW, the scale of the
defeat highlighted the extent to which Schroeder had failed to
convince large chunks of the population that the far-reaching - and
frequently painful - economic and social reforms encapsulated in his
“Agenda 2010” were vitally necessary, according to Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
Snap Elections
Schroeder called
for a general election to be moved forward to late this year, adding
that the “bitter defeat” in NRW “throws into question the political
basis for the continuation of our work” at a time when Germany was in
the process of wide-ranging reforms.
He said he wanted
to hold a general election “as quickly as possible, realistically in
autumn this year”, one year ahead of the scheduled date of September
2006.
The Bundestag
lower house of parliament will have to vote on the proposal.
Announcing his
decision, Schroeder insisted that time was needed for the huge raft of
social, pension and labor market reforms to begin to bear fruit.
“It will take time
for the reforms to have a favorable impact on the life of all people
in our country,” he said.
But the majority
of the population appears to believe that after two terms in power,
countless U-turns and counter U-turns on policy, and no sign that the
economy has turned the corner yet, Schroeder has had his chance and it
is time for change.
Also opposition
conservative CDU/CSU and liberal FDP parties insist that the reforms
do not go far enough.
Christian Democrat
leader Angela Merkel, who is likely to challenge Schroeder in the
general election in a bid to become Germany's first woman leader,
hailed Sunday's victory as a “sensational result”.
She confidently
welcomed the possibility of an early election, saying: “Every day
without the red-green coalition will be a good day for Germany”.
Muslim Concerns
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|
Ruettgers pledged to
ban hijab in schools within three weeks of winning elections.
(Reuters) |
The CDU’s
resounding victory sent shock waves among the Muslim minority in NRW,
home to one of German’s 3.4 million Muslims, the biggest Muslim
gathering in the country, says IOL’s correspondent.
During the
election campaign, Christian Democrats leader in NRW Juergen Ruettgers
said he would swiftly ban hijab from public schools in Germany’s most
populated state, with 13 million.
The legislatures
in Nordrhein-Westfalen and Reinland-Pfalz recently turned down
proposals by the CDU to ban Muslim school teachers from wearing hijab.
Germany's highest
tribunal, the constitutional court, ruled in 2003 that Baden-Wuerttemberg
was wrong to forbid a Muslim teacher from wearing hijab in the
classroom.
In addition to
Baden-Wuerttemberg, the states of Saarland and Niedersachsen ban
teachers from showing any religious or political affiliation,
including hijab.
The state of
Hessen also made amendments to its school laws, banning teachers from
wearing any symbols of religious or political nature while allowing
them a limited right to put on Christian or western symbols.
In Bavaria, laws
were enforced in 2004 banning teachers from wearing religious symbols
that are not harmonious with Christian cultural values. The state of
Brandenburg made the same amendments in 2003.
Ruettgers’s plan
to ban hijab within three weeks of his election victory, despite
opposition from other parties, was not the only reason for Muslims'
concern.
His anti-Muslim
drive is shown in many statements he made in the run up to state
elections and even before.
Late last month,
he told a German news channel that he is a Catholic who believes
Christianity presented the best image of man and should therefore be
leading all other religions worldwide.
The statements
drew the ire of Muslim minority leaders in the state back then.
About one million
Muslims of Germany's over three million live in the state, forming the
biggest Muslim gathering in the 16-German states.
Islam comes third
in Germany after Protestant and Catholic Christianity.
Source:
IslamOnline.net