Germany considers stripping citizenship from jihadists

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Police investigators work at the site of a suicide bombing in Ansbach, southern Germany, on July 25, 2016 in which a 27-year-old Syrian asylum seeker killed himself and wounded 15 people (AFP Photo/Daniel Karmann)
German citizens with dual nationality who fight for a terror group should be stripped of their German citizenship, the interior minister said Thursday, unveiling tough new measures after two attacks claimed by the Islamic State group.
"Germans who participate in fighting abroad for a terror militia and who have another citizenship should lose their German nationality," Thomas de Maiziere said.
Some 820 people have left Germany to fight alongside jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq, according to estimates by Germany\’s secret services.
With around one in three fighters having since returned to Germany, fears are running high of the threat they may pose on European soil.
But the issue of stripping German citizenship is controversial, with Green lawmaker Volker Beck swiftly condemning it as "desperate activism".
De Maiziere himself also acknowledged that junior coalition partner, the Social Democrats are likely to raise objections.
The measure, as well as other plans he unveiled for fighting terror threats, must still be approved by the right-left coalition as well as in the German parliament.
But making his case, he pointed to German legislation which already allows for citizens with dual nationalities and who fight for a foreign army to be stripped of their German citizenship.
"So if someone fights for terror militia that is similar to an armed force, and which calls itself an army, I don\’t see why this should not be considered," he argued.
In the wake of the November 13 Paris attacks, French President Francois Hollande had proposed stripping convicted terrorists of their French nationality. But the suggestion had to be dropped after a fierce debate, as critics warned it would create stateless persons.
Looking beyond the problem of homegrown jihadists, de Maiziere also introduced plans to tackle threats posed by foreigners to Germany, including speeding up the deportation process for those convicted.
Germany\’s toughened stance comes after two attacks in July by migrants in the southern state of Bavaria — an axe rampage on a train in Wuerzburg and a suicide bombing in Ansbach.
In Wuerzburg, the 17-year-old attacker was shot dead by police after injuring five people. In Ansbach, 15 people were injured after a failed Syrian asylum seeker detonated an explosive device outside a music festival, killing himself.
The link to migrants has put intense pressure on Chancellor Angela Merkel over her liberal asylum policies that had brought 1.1 million refugees to Germany last year.
With two state elections in September — at Merkel\’s stronghold Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and in Berlin — concern is growing among the political mainstream that populist party, the AfD, could make record gains, ahead of general elections next year.
De Maiziere said the latest anti-terror measures should be adopted before the autumn 2017 elections.
On the policing front, staffing will be boosted with 4,600 new posts to be created over the next year. In addition, spending on security would be raised by 2.0 billion euros ($2.2 billion) by 2020.
A special division will be set up within federal police forces that would coordinate security efforts in terror situations, said de Maiziere.
In addition, a new unit would be formed to draw up strategies and design products to combat cyber-crime and terrorism.
De Maiziere however rejected a call from conservative Christian Democrat state interior ministers for a burqa ban to be imposed, saying: "We can\’t ban everything that we reject, and I reject the wearing of the burqa."
SOURCE: AFP
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