Germany's right-wing populist AfD party set to win its first seats in parliament demands 'immediate closure of borders' and Islamic headscarf ban in election manifesto

  • Alternative for Germany aims to be the first party right of Angela Merkel's conservative block to enter parliament in September elections
  • The right-wing populist party is currently polling around 11 per cent
  • The AfD opposes all 'mainstream' political parties and what it regards as their allies in the media, arguing that Germany is ruled by a remote elite
  • It stressed its position that 'Islam is not part of Germany' and called for an immediate closure of borders 'to end the chaotic mass immigration'

  • The right-wing populist Alternative for Germany (AfD) party called for closing borders, restricting Islamic practices and fighting the ruling 'oligarchy' in its election campaign programme released on Thursday.
    Polling at around 11 per cent now, the four-year-old AfD aims to become the first party to the right of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative bloc to enter the national parliament in September elections.
    The AfD opposes all 'mainstream' political parties and what it regards as their allies in the media, arguing that Germany is ruled by a remote elite that is betraying ordinary citizens.
    The Alternative for Germany party released its campaign programme on Thursday, calling for an 'immediate closure of borders' in the country. Pictured above from left, AfD party members Joerg Meuthen, Albrecht Glaser and Frauke Petry
    The Alternative for Germany party released its campaign programme on Thursday, calling for an 'immediate closure of borders' in the country. Pictured above from left, AfD party members Joerg Meuthen, Albrecht Glaser and Frauke Petry
    Polling at around 11 per cent now, the four-year-old AfD aims to become the first party to the right of Chancellor Angela Merkel's (pictured above) conservative bloc to enter the national parliament in September elections
    Polling at around 11 per cent now, the four-year-old AfD aims to become the first party to the right of Chancellor Angela Merkel's (pictured above) conservative bloc to enter the national parliament in September elections
    'The secret sovereign in Germany is a small, powerful political oligarchy which has emerged from the existing political parties' and has come to dominate the state, public education and media, argues a draft of its programme.
    The AfD stressed its position that 'Islam is not part of Germany' - directly contradicting the message of its declared enemy, Merkel, to the country's estimated 4.5million Muslims.
    It also demanded 'the immediate closure of borders to end the chaotic mass immigration,' said a party representative, and said it opposes family reunions for those granted refugee status.

    It demanded an official investigation into Merkel's decision to keep open national borders amid a mass influx of refugees and migrants that has brought one million asylum seekers since 2015.
    'We want to pass on to coming generations a country that is still recognisable as our Germany,' said the AFD, bemoaning that 'Germany is losing its cultural identity because of a flawed notion of tolerance'.
    The AfD was founded as a small fringe party in 2013, at the height of the eurozone crisis, to oppose bailouts for indebted economies like Greece and to demand the reintroduction of the deutschmark.
    Supporters of AfD protest outside chancellor's office in Berlin
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    The AfD opposes all 'mainstream' political parties and what it regards as their allies in the media. Pictured above, Herbert Mohr, a 28-year-old representative of the nationalist AfD raises his voting card during a party meeting in Paaren im Glien near Berlin
    The AfD opposes all 'mainstream' political parties and what it regards as their allies in the media. Pictured above, Herbert Mohr, a 28-year-old representative of the nationalist AfD raises his voting card during a party meeting in Paaren im Glien near Berlin
    But after a leadership coup launched by co-leader Frauke Petry, it has adopted a more strident anti-immigration and law-and-order position, and publicly allied itself with France's far-right National Front.
    It has entered a string of state parliaments, but recently dipped in the polls amid infighting and a prominent member's inflammatory comments about Holocaust remembrance.
    Among its policies is a ban on Islamic head coverings for teachers, students and public servants, which it said would follow 'the French model'.
    It also opposes mosque minarets and loudspeakers for calls to prayer, describing them as symbols of 'Islamic domination'.
    The party would also reverse Germany's green energy transition away from nuclear power and fossil fuels and toward renewables such as solar and wind, arguing that there is no firm proof for man-made climate change.
    The programme is set to be adopted at a party congress in the western city of Cologne on April 22-23. 


    Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4298774/Germany-s-right-wing-ADF-party-demands-border-closures.html

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