Our Gift to You This Holiday Season
The Ultimate Christmas List for Conservatives
This Seems to Be Why Brown Placed their Top Security Official on Administrative...
CBS News' Bari Weiss Plans Massive Overhaul As Whiny Staffers Throw Tantrum Over...
Former Republican Senator Reveals Devastating Health News
Progressive Dems Don't Seem Eager for Another Government Shutdown...for Now
You're Not Going to Like How Your Government Spent Your Money This Year
A Student Was Killed During Class — Now the School District Is Hiding...
Good Riddance: This Radical Leftist Democrat Just Announced She's Leaving X
Eric Swalwell Just United the Internet in Hating His Post About Sasse's Cancer...
Justice Is No Longer Blind: Here's Why a Canadian Court Gave a Man...
New York Parents Warn Electric School Buses Are Leaving Their Kids Out in...
Trump's Most Important Achievement
The Common Faith of Elise Stefanik and Erika Kirk
Transformational Change Often Looks Like a Failure in the Middle
Tipsheet

Berlin's 'Safe Zone' Did Not Protect Women on New Year's Eve

The 2015/2016 New Year's Eve celebration in Germany was a place of nightmares. Over 1,000 women were reported to have been sexually assaulted by refugees who had streamed into the country in 2015 thanks to Chancellor Angela Merkel's dangerous open door policy.

Advertisement

More than 2,000 men were alleged to have been involved, and about half of the suspects identified at the time were refugees who had only recently arrived in Germany, the Washington Post reported. The attacks appeared to be coordinated. 

Cologne was a particular target, with 600 cases having been reported.

In 2017, there were far fewer cases because Germany sent thousands of additional police officers to the festivities. The government also passed much stricter sexual assault laws. 

This year, Berlin hoped that by creating "safe zones" they could protect women from similar nightmare scenarios. At these zones, located near the Brandenburg Gate, women could report incidents of sexual assault, seek refuge, or seek medical help from the German Red Cross after having been attacked themselves.

"[Assaulted women] can stay here and calm down or speak to someone trained to offer psychological support,” said Anja Marx, the spokeswoman of Berlin's main New Year's Eve celebrations. Up to five members of a German Red Cross team will be available to offer immediate support to victims. (Washington Post)

Advertisement

Related:

GERMANY NEW YEARS

Despite the effort, at least 13 cases of sexual assault have been reported to have occurred this New Year's Eve.

Over 1 million people arrived in Germany in 2015 as part of German Chancellor Angela Merkel's open door decision. It became tragically clear that they were pouring over the border much too quickly. Merkel's inability to handle the refugee crisis has led to her tanking popularity

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos