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Jews and homosexuals should hide their identities in Berlin as police chief warns against entering Arab neighborhoods


Berlin's police chief warns Jews and homosexuals against entering Arab-dominated neighborhoods. Kubicki replies that the officers are more concerned with following up on Habeck's complaints.

Berlin - Berlin's police chief Barbara Slowik has warned Jews and homosexuals not to enter areas of the capital where "people of Arab descent" live. She told the Berliner Zeitung: "However, there are areas - and we have to be honest about this - where I would advise people who wear a kippah or are openly gay or lesbian to be more careful."

Most recently, Arabs on Berlin's streets broke out in open celebration over Iran's missile attacks on Israel. Migrants attacked Jewish children and young people on sports fields and in schools.

Kubicki: Police busy with Habeck reports
With a swipe at Green Party top candidate Robert Habeck, Deputy Bundestag President Wolfgang Kubicki (FDP) responded to the statement: "While in Germany police officers and public prosecutors are busy pursuing insults against the Vice Chancellor, the Berlin police chief is warning Jewish and homosexual people not to enter certain parts of the city."

On X he added: “If we can no longer concentrate on essentials, the rule of law will lose its credibility and thus its foundation.”

Arab neighborhoods with "sympathies for terrorist groups"
Slowik, a registered SPD member, does not want her warning to be understood as "defamation" against Arab migrants, she stressed. But: "Unfortunately, there are certain neighborhoods in which the majority of people are of Arab descent who also harbor sympathies for terrorist groups. Open anti-Semitism is expressed there against people of Jewish faith and origin."

Slowik then toned down the explosiveness of her statement: "Fortunately, violent crimes against Jewish people are few and far between, although every crime is undoubtedly one too many. Nevertheless, I can understand that fear and concern remain."

1,300 anti-Semitic acts of violence
The Berlin police have initiated more than 6,200 investigations into anti-Semitism and incitement since Hamas' attack on Israel on October 7, 2023. Most of these involve hate postings on the Internet as well as property damage and propaganda offenses.

This included 1,300 violent crimes. Most of these, however, were attacks on police officers. Slowik said that the increasing number of investigations was increasing the fear among Jews in Berlin of becoming the target of an attack. She assured that the police would do everything in their power to ensure the safety of citizens.

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