
German Chancellor suggests immigrants have 'imported antisemitism'
Following his
first meeting as German Chancellor with US President Donald Trump
in Washington on Thursday, Friedrich Merz gave a televised interview with US right-wing outlet
Fox News
in which his use of a controversial phrase raised eyebrows in Germany.
Citing a report by Germany's Federal Association of Research and Information Centres on Antisemitism (RIAS) – which found an increase in antisemitic incidents in Germany in 2024 – the interviewer asked the chancellor what he was doing to address the issue.
'We are doing everything we can to bring these numbers down," Merz told Fox News. "We are prosecuting those who break the law, and frankly, we have a sort of imported antisemitism with this big number of migrants that we have within the last ten years.'
Merz's reply appeared to put blame for increasing antisemitism on migrants who have arrived in the country during the last ten years.
In particular, the phrase "imported antisemitism" has been highlighted as problematic by an independent German organisation that keeps track of words and phrases linked with xenophobia.
'Ugliest word of the year'
Controversial in Germany, the phrase 'imported antisemitism' (
importierter Antisemitismus)
received press coverage earlier this year when it was nominated as Germany's
Unwort des Jahres --
in other words the ugliest word of the year for 2024.
Every year,
Unwort des Jahres
– an independent, voluntary organisation – attempts to draw attention to the most discriminatory and malicious phrases which have sprung up or gained popularity in Germany.
A jury of experts including journalists, linguists and rotating guests assesses thousands of public submissions -- this year there were 3,172 submissions nominating 655 different phrases, of which 80 were accepted by the jury.
Germany's official
Unwort des Jahres 2024
was
Biodeutsch
.
READ ALSO:
Biodeutsch - Why this is Germany's ugliest word of the year
However, publicist and political scientist, Saba-Nur Cheema, and Director of the Anne Frank Educational Centre, Meron Mendel, chose 'imported antisemitism' as their personal
Unwort des Jahres
for 2024.
According to the jury, the expression is used to suggest that hatred of Jews has become a problem in Germany due to the influx of migrants. The term is used primarily in right-wing circles to discriminate against Muslims and people with a migration background 'and to distract from their own antisemitism'.
Advertisement
Of 8,627 cases of antisemitism recorded in the RIAS report for 2024, 5,857 cases were classified as 'Israel-related antisemitism,' more than twice as many as in the previous year. RIAS defines 'Israel-related antisemitism,' as Jews in Germany being held responsible for actions of the Israeli government, the state of Israel being demonized, and its right to exist being denied (among other criteria).
The report also recorded 544 individual incidents with a right-wing extremist background, the highest number since the nationwide comparison began in 2020.
President Trump repeatedly criticised former chancellor Angela Merkel for her decision to welcome a large number of Syrian refugees in 2015 during his televised meeting with Merz on Thursday, a policy which Merz has also previously criticised.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Int'l Business Times
32 minutes ago
- Int'l Business Times
Trump 'Deceived His Own Voters' by 'Submitting to the Wishes of a Wanted War Criminal': Iranian Foreign Minister Says in Trump-Netanyahu Rebuke
President Donald Trump "deceived his own voters by submitting to the wishes of a wanted war criminal" after he and his administration bombed three of Iran's nuclear facilities early Sunday morning, an Iranian official declared. During a press conference in Istanbul on Sunday, amid ongoing peace talks between Iran, Germany, France, and the UK, Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi condemned the Trump administration's escalation of the Israel-Iran war. "While President Trump was elected on a platform of putting an end to America's costly involvement of forever wars in our part of the world, he has betrayed not only Iran by abusing our commitment to diplomacy but also deceived his own voters by submitting to the wishes of a wanted war criminal who has grown accustomed to exploiting the lives and wealth of American citizens to further the Israeli regime's objectives," Abbas Araqchi stated, referencing Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a warrant for Netanyahu's arrest in November 2024, alleging the Israeli prime minister was responsible for multiple war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Gaza Strip, beginning Oct. 8, 2023. Abbas Araqchi added that the "warmongering and lawless" Trump administration is "solely and fully responsible for the dangerous consequences and far-reaching implications of its act of aggression." "The U.S. military attack on the territorial integrity and national sovereignty of a UN member state carried collusion with the genocidal Israeli machine has once again revealed the extent of the United States' hostility toward the peace-seeking people of Iran," he continued. The Iranian official reaffirmed that Iran will never compromise its independence or sovereignty, emphasizing the nation's unwavering commitment to protecting both its autonomy and its people. As the second-largest country in the region, Iran has a population nearing 91 million. Also on Sunday, the Iranian foreign minister wrote in an X post that the U.S. "committed a grave violation of the UN Charter, international law and the [Non-Proliferation Treaty]." He also called it an "outrageous" attack that "will have everlasting consequences." "Each and every member of the UN must be alarmed over this extremely dangerous, lawless, and criminal behavior," Abbas Araqchi wrote. "In accordance with the UN Charter and its provisions allowing a legitimate response in self-defense, Iran reserves all options to defend its sovereignty, interest, and people." The United States, a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council, has committed a grave violation of the UN Charter, international law and the NPT by attacking Iran's peaceful nuclear installations. The events this morning are outrageous and will have everlasting…


DW
3 hours ago
- DW
Germany's Merz says Iran should negotiate with US and Israel – DW – 06/22/2025
Following the US strikes on Sunday morning, German Chancellor Merz has called for Iran to negotiate. The German military meanwile has conducted its first direct evacuation flights from Israel. Following the US attacks on nuclear facilities in Iran overnight, the German government got together its security council. Chancellor Friedrich Merz called upon Iran to negotiate a peaceful resolution to the conflict with Israel and the US. Reactions from politicians of the governing parties were mixed. "After Iran refused to accept the Europeans' offer to negotiate, the consequence of an American strike against the nuclear facilities was foreseeable," deputy parliamentary leader of the chancellor's governing center-right Christian Democrats (CDU), Jürgen Hardt, told the newspaper. This would set back the nuclear program by years, for the benefit of Israel and the entire free world, including Germany, Hardt added. The Foreign Ministers of Germany, France, and Britain had made another attempt on Friday in Geneva with their Iranian counterpart Abbas Araghchi to achieve a diplomatic solution to the conflict, ultimately without success. Foreign policy expert Rolf Mützenich, of the junior coalition partners, the center-left Social Democrats (SPD), however expressed disappointment. "The attempt to strengthen international order through cooperation, control, and treaties will be pushed back decades," he told the . To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Mützenich recently made headlines as one of the masterminds behind the "SPD Manifest," whose approximately 100 signatories lamented increasing global militarization and demanded new diplomatic solutions to wars and conflicts. Meanwhile, the federal government evacuated more Germans from Jordan on Saturday. They used a charter flight from Israel's neighbor as Israeli airspace has been closed since the start of the war with Iran over a week ago. According to the Foreign Ministry in Berlin, 123 Germans managed to leave the country on the flight. People had to organize the journey to Jordan themselves. Over the past days, a total of 345 people had already reached Germany in this way, with charter planes landing in Frankfurt am Main. For the first time since the beginning of the conflict, the German military received permission to evacuate German citizens directly from Israel with two aircraft. According to government circles, difficult negotiations with the Israelis were necessary for this. Officially, "the flights were carried out at short notice in close coordination with Israeli authorities and were primarily for families with children and other vulnerable persons." In the night leading into Saturday, the two planes landed at Cologne/Bonn Airport with a total of 64 people on board. Federal Defense Minister Boris Pistorius (SPD) thanked the soldiers afterward: "We can rely on our Bundeswehr. After only brief advance warning, our Air Force crews were on site. They carried out their mission highly professionally." Those evacuated had previously registered on a list which helps employees of the German embassy in Israel have an overview of which Germans are actually in Israel. Not all of them, however, are determined to leave or want to leave Israel, government circles indicated, many use the list only as a safety measure and means of contact. Currently, around 4,300 people are registered in Israel on this list. A similar list for Iran suggests there are around 1,000 German nationals in the country. Before the US attacks on Iranian nuclear facilities began, the German government had withdrawn personnel from the embassy in Tehran. The staff members were relocated abroad, but the embassy continues to operate mobile operations. The Foreign Office explained that Germany followed international partners who had taken similar measures. On Friday, for example, Britain and Switzerland closed their representations in Iran. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Berlin does not offer flights for Germans living in Iran. The explanation was that border crossings to Turkey and Armenia remain open, even though travel through the country is difficult and dangerous. This applies even more certainly now after the US intervention in the war. For both Israel and Iran, the German government had previously rejected the idea of organizing convoys with buses. "This would mean longer journeys — and sometimes waiting times — and thus create significant road risks given the ongoing air strikes," the German government you're here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter, Berlin Briefing.


DW
4 hours ago
- DW
What's next in the Israel-Iran war as US steps in? – DW – 06/22/2025
DW Middle East expert Shani Rozanes says Donald Trump's direct military intervention has cemented US-Israel ties — calling it unprecedented. But is military action really effective in stopping Iran's nuclear program? And is there still a chance to deescalate the conflict? Foreign policy expert William Alberque joins DW to assess recent developments in the Israel-Iran war.