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词条 Immigration and crime in Germany
释义

  1. "Guest worker" era in the 1950s-1980s

  2. Criminal activity by immigrants since the 1990s

      Organised crime    Honor killings    Sexual offences    Gang rape    Statistics  

  3. Violence against women

      Female Genital Mutilation  

  4. Crimes against immigrants since the 1990s{{anchor|Crimes_against_immigrants}}

     Vigilantism and anti-immigrant protests 

  5. Political and social impact

  6. See also

  7. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2019}}{{short description|Crimes against and by immigrants in Germany}}{{Multiple issues|{{NPOV|date=October 2018}}{{Lead too short|date=March 2019}}
}}Crimes committed against and by immigrants in Germany. Crimes involving foreigners (German: Ausländerkriminalität) have been a longstanding theme in public debates in Germany.[1]

"Guest worker" era in the 1950s-1980s

The {{ill|Ausländergesetz (Deutschland)|de}} (Foreigners Act) of 1965 attempted to control immigration to West Germany.[2]

During the 1950s and 1960s, a group known as Gastarbeiter participated in an organised immigration programme to the former West Germany because of labour shortages in the country. The former East Germany also had labour shortages but their "guest worker" programme tended to encourage immigration from other socialist and communist countries. Many former "guest workers" became German citizens. The first generation of "guest workers" did not have an elevated crime rate, second- and third-generation immigrants studied in the 1970s and 1980s had higher crime rates{{quantify|date=March 2019}} than their German contemporaries who were not from an immigrant background.[3]

A 1991 Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich study covering the preceding two decades found that crime rates were higher among immigrants with a strongly different cultural background from Germans. Under the guest worker programme, Turks and Yugoslavs had far higher crime rates than Spaniards and Portuguese, while the highest crime rates were recorded among individuals from third world countries. For third world countries, the immigrants were first generation.[4]

Criminal activity by immigrants since the 1990s

Studies in the early 2000s tended to show little correlation between migrants and crime in Germany.[5][6]

From the start of 2015 to the end of 2017, {{Val|1356600}} asylum seekers were registered in total.[7] According to a 2018 study by German criminologists, the crime rate of non-Germans between the ages of 16 and 30 is within the same range as that of Germans.[7] In May 2016, U.S. fact-checker Politifact suggested that, as crimes by immigrants rose 79 percent in 2015 and the number of refugees in the country rose by 440 percent, the crime rate among refugees was lower than that among German natives.[8]

In 2018, the interior ministry's report "Criminality in context with immigration" (German: Kriminalität im Kontext von Zuwanderung) [9] for the first time summarized and singled out all people who entered Germany via the asylum system. The group called "immigrants" includes all asylum seekers, tolerated people, "unauthorized residents" and all those entitled to protection (subsidiary protected, contingent refugees and refugees under the Geneva Convention and asylum). The group represented roughly 2 percent of the German population by end of 2017,[10] but was suspected of committing 8.5 percent of crimes (violations off the German alien law are not included). The numbers suggest that the differences could at least to some extent have to do with the fact that the refugees are younger and more often male than the average German. The statistics show that the asylum-group is highly overrepresented for some types of crime. They account for 14.3 percent of all suspects in crimes against life (which include murder, manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter), 12.2 percent of sexual offences, 11.4 percent of thefts and 9.7 percent of body injuries The report also shows differences between the origin of migrants. Syrians are underrepresented as suspects, whereas citizens from most African countries, especially northern Africans are strongly overerrepresented. Afghans and Pakistanis are particularly overerrepresented in sexual offenses.[9][10]

From 2015 to 2016, the number of suspected crimes by refugees, asylum-seekers and illegal immigrants increased by 50 percent.[11] The figures showed that most of the suspected crimes were by repeat offenders, and that 1 percent of migrants accounted for 40 percent of total migrant crimes.[11] From 2016 to 2017, the number of crimes committed by refugees, asylum-seekers and illegal immigrants in Germany decreased by 40 percent, which was mostly caused by significantly less violations off the alien law, because far fewer asylum seekers entered the country in this year.[12]

The first comprehensive study of the social effects of the one million refugees going to Germany found that it caused "very small increases in crime in particular with respect to drug offenses and fare-dodging."[13][14] A report released by the German Federal Office of Criminal Investigation in November 2015 found that over the period January–September 2015, the crime rate of refugees was the same as that of native Germans.[15] According to Deutsche Welle, the report "concluded that the majority of crimes committed by refugees (67 percent) consisted of theft, robbery and fraud. Sex crimes made for less than 1 percent of all crimes committed by refugees, while homicide registered the smallest fraction at 0.1 percent."[15] According to the conservative newspaper Die Welts description of the report, the most common crime committed by refugees was not paying fares on public transportation.[16] According to Deutsche Welle's reporting in February 2016 of a report by the German Federal Office of Criminal Investigation, the number of crimes committed by refugees did not rise in proportion to the number of refugees between 2014–2015.[17] According to Deutsche Welle, "between 2014 and 2015, the number of crimes committed by refugees increased by 79 percent. Over the same period, the number of refugees in Germany increased by 440 percent."[17]

DW reported in 2006 that in Berlin, young male immigrants were three times more likely to commit violent crimes than their German peers.[18]

Whereas the Gastarbeiter in the 1950s and 1960s did not have an elevated crime rate, second- and third-generation of immigrants had significantly higher crime rates.[19]

A study in the European Economic Review found that the immigration of more than 3 million people of German descent to Germany after the collapse of the Soviet Union led to a significant increase in crime.[20] The effects were strongest in regions with high unemployment, high preexisting crime levels or large shares of foreigners.[20]

The Independent reported that in 2017 crime in Germany was at its lowest for 30 years, and that crimes by non-Germans had fallen by 23% to just over 700,000.[21]

In 2018, the Wall Street Journal analysed German crime statistics for crime suspects and found that the foreigners, overall 12.8% of the population, make up a disproportionate share of crime suspects (34.7%), see horizontal bar chart.[22]

Organised crime

{{See also|Organized crime in Germany}}

For several types of crime and drug crime in particular, organised crime gangs were dominated by people from countries with high rates of immigration to Germany.[9] In 2017, the most common nationality of foreign organized crime gangs was Albanian with 21 gangs, the great majority of which were active in drug trafficking.[9] In 2017 there were 13 identified Serbian organized crime gangs, active in drug crime, property crime and violent crime.[9] In 2017 there were 12 Kosovar gangs, active in property crime, drug trade and forgeries.[9] Syrian gangs were active in drug trade and drug smuggling.[9]

Arab and Kurdish organized crime gangs have their roots in asylum seekers who arrived beginning in the 1980s.[23] In the 1980s thousands of Arabs and Kurds from districts of Lebanon and Turkey, significant portions of whome were stateless, sought asylum in Germany. Unlike the earlier guest workers, were allowed to work but instead received social benefits and often did not integrate into German society. Some of the arrived families instead relied on tribal and Islamic codes of justice.[22] Groups of extended Arab and Kurdish families centered in Berlin are active in selling illegal drugs and running illegal prostitution, but have invested in legal businesses including real estate, fitness studios, gambling and restaurants.[23] They exploit asylum seekers who arrived in the European migrant crisis of 2015-2016, employing them as streetcorner durg dealers.[23]

In 2017, 16 Nigerian crime gangs were active in illegal immigration (German: Schleuserkriminalität) drug crime and other offenses in the night life scene.[24]

In an opinion piece in the Sueddeutsche Zeitung in September 2018, the political scientist {{ill|Ralph Ghadban|de}} argued that federal authorities had refused to recognise the specific problem of organized crime gangs based on family ties and ethnicity ({{ill|Clan-Kriminalität|de}}), subsuming it under "organised crime" and that, encouraged by the success of the Arab clans, families from other ethnic groups, including Chechens, Albanians, and Kosovars were developing similar structures. According to Ghadban, these structures present a threat to liberal, individualised societies because they hinder integration. A modern society, he says, only functions when people voluntarily follow its rules, but clan members consider themselves members of a family rather than citizens of a country, and do not submit to the rule of law, regarding individuals who do so as weak and unprotected.[25]

According to the Wall Street Journal, the ethnic crime clans represent both a security threat as well as an example of what can happen when integration of immigrants fail.[22]

Honor killings

{{See also|Honor killings#Germany}}

Investigating criminal records for partner homicides from the years 1996-2005 period, the BKA concluded that there were about 12 cases of honour killings in Germany per year, including cases involving collective family honor and individual male honor, out of an average about 700 annual homicides. An accompanied study of all homicides in Baden-Württemberg show that men from Turkey, Yugoslavia and Albania have a between three and fime times overrepresentation for partner homicides, both honor and non-honor releated. The causes for the higher rate was given as low education and social status of these groups along with cultural traditions of violence against women.[26]

Sexual offences

{{Side box |metadata=No
| above = Fraction of sexual offense cases with at least one immigrant suspect
| text = {{Graph:Chart
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|width=200
|xAxisTitle=year
|yAxisTitle=%
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|yAxisMax=15
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|x=2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016
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| imageright =
| below=Bundeskriminalamt and Der Spiegel[27]
}}

At least one immigrant was identified as a suspect in 3404 sexual offence cases reported in 2016, representing a proportion of 9.1% of the total; this was twice the proportion in the previous year. The definition of "immigrant" includes asylum-seekers, persons who have been allowed to stay temporarily but have not received asylum status, illegal immigrants and refugees brought into Germany on the basis of quotas. According to statistics collected by the German Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), the number of immigrants suspected of sexual offences in Germany has gone up in absolute numbers in the 2012-2016 period, whilst the number of German perpetrators has gone down.[27]

In 2017, the proportion of asylum seekers (defined as "asylum applicants, quota or civil war refugees or irregular immigrants") relative to the total population had risen, while the number of asylum seekers as a percentage of sexual offence suspects had fallen slightly since 2016.[28]

Gang rape

{{See also|Rape in Germany}}

After the gang rapes where immigrants were suspect in Freiburg, Munich and Velbert, an overview of police gang rape statistics in the 2010s was published by Tagesschau in 2018. The profile of the suspects and convicted fit that of sex crime in general as they were almost all male. Additionally foreign{{clarify |date=November 2018 |reason="foreign" requires definition}} perpetrators were overrepresented compared to their share of the overall population in Germany. The absolute number of gang rapes were not increasing, but the proportion of foreign{{clarify |date=November 2018 |reason="foreign" requires definition}} suspects rose and the proportion of Syrian, Afghan and Iraqi suspects rose. One reason cited for the increase was that these demographics have larger proportions of young males, which are inherently overrepresented for crime.[29]

The number of assault gang rapes were significantly higher in periods prior to 2015 and the European migrant crisis, with the exception of 2016 where the New Year's Eve sexual assaults in Germany nearly doubled the number of cases. In 2017 there were 122 cases, the fewest since the German reunification in 1990.[29] The sexual assaults in Cologne on New Year's Eve 2016 nevertheless ended the atmosphere of euphoria earlier in the year when hundreds of thousands of migrants had arrived in Germay.[30]

Statistics

In German Federal Police Office (BKA) statistics on immigrant crime, "immigrant" include:

  • Asylum seekers
  • Migrants who are temporarily allowed to stay despite not having received refugee status
  • Illegal immigrants
  • Quota refugees

Suspects with approved asylum applications are not included.[27]

According to the German Federal Office for Migration and Refugees people with migration background (German: Migrationshintergrund) are those born without German citizenship, or born with at least one parent without citizenship.[31]

Violence against women

Women with a migration background (German: Migrationshintergrund) are, according to some studies, more often and more seriously affected by domestic violence from partners and have more difficulty extricating themselves from an abusive relationship.[32]

Female Genital Mutilation

{{See also|Prevalence of female genital mutilation by country#Europe}}FGM has been illegal in Germany since June 2013.[52][33] According to women's right organisation Terre des Femmes in 2014, there were 25,000 victims living in Germany and a further 2,500 are at risk of being mutilated. Perpetrators are migrant parents who take their children abroad, mostly during holidays, for the mutilation or bring foreign practitioners to Germany to mutilate several girls at once.[34] In 2018, the estimate had increased to {{Val|65000}}. A further {{Val|15500}} were at risk of having the mutilation done to them which represented an increase of 17% on the previous year.[35]

According to the BMFSFJ most of the victims originated in Eritrea, Indonesia, Somalia, Egypt and Ethiopia.[36]

Crimes against immigrants since the 1990s{{anchor|Crimes_against_immigrants}}

The long history of Turkish immigration to Germany resulted in Turkish immigrant families becoming one of the largest ethnic minorities in Germany,[37] estimated at between 2.5 and 4 million.[38] Around a third of these still hold Turkish citizenship.[39]

On 27 October 1991, Mete Ekşi (de), a 19-year-old student from Kreuzberg, was attacked by three neo-Nazi German brothers. Ekşi's funeral in November 1991 was attended by 5,000 people.[40] Aslı Bayram's father was murdered in 1994 by a neo-Nazi and Bayram herself was wounded in the attack.[41]

In 1993, an arson attack against a Turkish household in the town of Solingen in North Rhine-Westphalia caused the deaths of five people. Ahead of a commemorative event in 2018, 25 years after the event, Turkey's Foreign Office noted that "racism, xenophobia and Islamophobia are on the rise" in Germany and a representative of the family who were attacked called for reconciliation. A spokesman for anti-right demonstrators at the commemoration said, "When you look at how the mood was back then and how it is turning again now, I believe it's important to rally in the streets and to speak out against it."[42]

According to a 2016 study, there were 1,645 instances of anti-refugee violence and social unrest in Germany during the years 2014 and 2015.[43]

According to the German Federal Criminal Office, there were 797 attacks against residences of refugees or migrants from January to October 2016. 740 attacks had a right-wing background, which also couldn't be ruled out in 57 further cases. Of these, 320 cases of property damage were recorded, in 180 cases propaganda material was dispersed and in 137 cases violence was used. In addition, 61 incidents of arson as well as 10 violations of the Explosives Law, 4 of them in front of a residence of refugees, were registered. According to Der Tagesspiegel, there were also 11 cases of attempted murder or homicide. In 2015, there had been 1,029 attacks against refugee residences, following 199 in 2014.[44] Germany's interior ministry stated that 560 people, including 43 children, had been injured in such attacks during 2016.[45]

A 2017 study found that "the strength of right-wing parties in a district considerably boosts the probability of attacks on refugees in that area."[46]

A 2018 paper by the Institute of Labor Economics found that xenophobic violence during the 1990s in Germany reduced the integration and well-being of immigrants.[47]{{Page needed|date=October 2018}}

Vigilantism and anti-immigrant protests

Vigilantism against immigrants is considered to have become more widespread after the sexual assaults by migrants in Cologne and other German cities on New Year's Eve 2015. In January 2016 a mob attacked a group of Pakistanis in Cologne, and at Bautzen in February, an arson attack on a hostel for asylum seekers took place[48] In February 2018, in Heilbronn, a 70-year-old man knifed three immigrants while drunk, in a protest "about the current refugee policy".[49] A perceived increase in attacks on immigrants led to Chancellor Angela Merkel condemning anti-immigrant "vigilante" groups following the Chemnitz incident.[50]

Political and social impact

Four violent crimes committed during the week of 18 July 2016, three of them by asylum seekers, created significant political pressure for changes in the Angela Merkel administration policy of welcoming refugees.[51] The Wall Street Journal reported that two notorious crimes committed by asylum seekers in consecutive weeks in December 2016 had added fuel to debates on immigration and surveillance in Germany.[52] The Siegaue rape case as well as the 2017 Kandel stabbing attack, in which a migrant who had been denied refugee status but who had not been deported killed his 16-year-old ex-girlfriend, intensified the discussion about admitting migrants.[53]

The rape and murder of 14-year-old Susanna Feldmann in Wiesbaden in May 2018 sparked a debate on how the 20-year-old Kurdish Iraqi suspect and his family were able to leave the country using fake identities after the murder, as well as how he had been able to stay in Germany after his asylum application had been rejected.[54][55]

Criminologists commenting on the situation in 2018 pointed out that the demographics of the migrants is an important factor: young males (of all origins) were responsible for half of all violent crimes in 2014, and young men made up 27% of all asylum-seekers who came in 2015. Dr Dominic Kudlacek, of the Criminological Research Unit of Lower Saxony lists other risk factors such as social deprivation, being alone, living in refugee camps with little privacy and spending most of their time with other people suffering from these risk factors which can add to the likelihood of committing crimes.[28]

Criminologist Simon Cottee cites sociologist Stanley Cohen when he suggests that fear of immigrant crime among Germans is a form of moral panic to which societies are subject from time to time.[56]

See also

  • Immigration to Germany
  • Crime in Germany
  • Flüchtlingspolitik (German Refugee Policies)

References

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56. ^{{cite news|last1=Cottee|first1=Simon|title=Europe's moral panic about the migrant Muslim 'other'|url=http://www.latimes.com/opinion/op-ed/la-oe-cottee-fear-of-refugees-20151013-story.html|accessdate=25 July 2016|work=Los Angeles Times|date=13 October 2015}}

4 : Crime in Germany|Correlates of crime|Immigration law|Immigration to Germany

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