Germany’s Merkel stands by refugee policy after ‘terrifying’ attacks

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday described recent attacks in the country and across Europe as “shocking, depressing and terrifying,” but she refused to back down on her open-door refugee policy that has attracted fierce criticism following recent assaults in the country.

Germany has been rattled by four attacks in the past two weeks, three of which authorities say have been carried out by asylum seekers or refugees with inspiration from Islamist extremism.

The attacks have given way to mockery by some Germans as well as foreigners, who have dubbed the recent weeks of bloodshed on social media as #MerkelSommer, or even “Merkel’s summer of slaughter.”

One Twitter user posted a pair of hands covered in blood, quoting Merkel with, “We have already accomplished a lot,” using the #MerkelSommer hashtag.

Merkel vowed to boost security and improve counterterrorism measures, but she stood firm on Germany’s position of accepting nearly all asylum seekers found to be legitimate refugees.

“What the terrorists want … is that we lose our view for what’s important to us. They want to divide our unity, our cooperation, they want to harm our life,” she told reporters at a news conference, according to a translator.

“They want to prevent our openness to welcoming people. They spread hate between cultures and also among religions.”

‘Anxiety and fear’

Merkel added, “We are being tested in the way we live. Our understanding of freedom and security is being tested.”

But she said that Germany had faced such challenges before, repeating the phrase “We can do it” several times.

“Anxiety and fear can’t advise our political decisions,” she said.

But she added that those who came to Germany as refugees but then carry out attacks “mock the country that took them in.”

She said Germany must improve the process for repatriation of migrants whose asylum applications had been rejected.

International treaties forbid countries from returning migrants to places of danger, such a war-ravaged Syria, even if a migrant has been refused refugee status.

ISIS infiltrates the refugee route

Merkel acknowledged that terror groups like ISIS have been able to penetrate the migrant route through Europe used by refugees to flee places of conflict, like Syria.

“We do know that the Islamic State use the refugee movements, that they … have used it to also make it possible for terrorists to enter. We of course try to limit this kind of movement,” Merkel said.

“There is another risk of perpetrators that have not come to the attention of authorities. We need an early warning system so that authorities can act as soon as as … it turns out there is some radicalization.”

A 27-year-old Syrian suicide bomber on Sunday attacked a music festival in the city of Ansbach, killing only himself but injuring 15 others. He had applied for asylum in Germany but had been rejected because he had an asylum application already pending in Bulgaria, German authorities said. He had been informed two weeks earlier that he was to be deported in 30 days.

Just hours before that attack another 21-year-old Syrian asylum seeker killed a woman in Reutlingen, attacking her with a knife nearly two feet in length.

Germany was already reeling from a shooting spree in Munich on Friday by an 18-year-old German-Iranian that left nine people dead. That attacker was not an asylum seeker, however. He was born and raised in Munich.

And last Monday, a 17-year-old carried out an ax attack on board a train outside of Wurzburg. Authorities have said he was a refugee, but there has been confusion over whether he was from Afghanistan or Pakistan.

Europe has been dealing with the biggest influx of refugees in its history as the Syrian war shows little sign of letting up and as immigrants from African nations like Eritrea continue to flee oppressive regimes.

Germany took in more than one million refugees in 2015, making it the most open country in Europe to asylum seekers.

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