E/CN.4/1996/72/Add.2
page 2
INTRODUCTION
A.
Purpose of the mission
1.
Pursuant to Commission on Human Rights resolutions 1993/20
of 2 March 1993 and 1995/12 of 24 February 1995, and by agreement with
the German Government, the Special Rapporteur undertook a fact-finding
mission to the Federal Republic of Germany from 18 to 27 September 1995.
2.
It should be recalled that German reunification was accompanied by
violent outbursts of xenophobic sentiment and anti-Semitic acts fomented
and perpetrated by extreme rightist organizations and neo-Nazi cells.
Between 1991 and 1993, xenophobically and racially motivated incidents,
particularly targeting asylum-seekers and other foreigners, increased
markedly. The most serious incidents took place: (a) in Hoyerswerda, in
Saxony, in September 1991, when skinheads supported by some of the local
population attacked and set fire to a migrant workers' hostel housing
some 150 Mozambicans and Vietnamese; (b) in Rostock (Mecklenburg-Pomerania)
where, over five nights in August 1992, rightist extremists supported by
more than 500 people from the town destroyed a hostel inhabited by
asylum-seekers, principally Gypsies; (c) in Mölln (Schleswig-Holstein)
where arson on 23 November 1992 caused the deaths of three individuals of
Turkish origin; (d) in the same town in May 1993, when incendiary bombs
thrown at a Turkish family's home led to the deaths of five people,
including one woman and two children; (e) in Berlin, where the holocaust
memorial in the Tiergarten was destroyed by a bomb on 30 August 1992.
3.
Material forwarded to the Special Rapporteur also alleges that some
members of the police forces have been guilty of xenophobic behaviour and
indulged in the ill-treatment of foreigners. 1
4.
Mindful of the way the situation had developed since 1994, the Special
Rapporteur wished to examine the underlying causes of the phenomena observed
and to acquaint himself with the steps taken by the Federal Government and
authorities in the Länder and with what had been done by society at large.
As the incidents also raised the question of how foreigners integrate into
Germany, the Special Rapporteur inquired into the ways found of tackling this
problem.
B.
The mission
5.
Having been welcomed in Bonn, the provisional capital, the Special
Rapporteur travelled far and wide through Germany, meeting senior officials
responsible for combating racism and racial discrimination at the Federal
and Länder levels. He visited the Free Hanseatic Cities of Bremen and
Hamburg in the north, Berlin and Dresden (Saxony) in the east; Stuttgart
(Baden-Württemberg) in the south; and Frankfurt and Wiesbaden in the
east-central region of Hessen.
6.
Among others, the Special Rapporteur met Mr. Willi Hausmann, the Federal
Minister for Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth; Mr. Ingo Kober,
the State Secretary at the Federal Ministry of Justice; Mr. Helmut Schäfer,
the Minister of State and Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid and Human Rights