E/CN.4/1996/72/Add.2
page 24
Annex IV
MEASURES TO COMBAT RACISM AND ANIMOSITY TOWARDS
FOREIGNERS IN BERLIN
Situation in the reunified city of Berlin
1.
The political changes that have taken place in eastern and south-eastern
Europe since the disappearance of the inter-German frontier and the opening
of eastern European frontiers have led to a major influx of immigrants from
those regions into the Federal Republic of Germany. Berlin, as the European
metropolis nearest to the east, and the city with the largest population of
settled minorities coming from those countries, is particularly affected by
immigration. The influx may perhaps tend to diminish but, depending on
circumstances, it might increase still further.
2.
The authoritarian structures built into society under the former
German Democratic Republic, founded as they were largely on indoctrination
and the rejection of everything foreign, have produced certain recognizable
differences in the attitudes of the inhabitants of East Berlin as compared
with their counterparts in West Berlin on the question of non-Germans residing
in Germany. Most acts of criminal violence involving young Germans of the far
right have occurred in East Berlin.
3.
We cannot, however, label as xenophobic the entire population of
East Berlin. The latest opinion polls show that the differences between
East and West in terms of degree of open-mindedness towards foreigners have
become less marked. It must, however, be noted that this open-mindedness does
not, in the east, go as far as wanting to have closer contacts (for example,
ties of friendship, marriage, etc.) with non-Germans.
Facts and figures
4.
Berlin has a foreign population of about 11 per cent, or in absolute
figures some 385,000 persons.
5.
Only between 2 and 3 per cent of non-Germans live in the eastern part of
the city; most of those are former contract workers from Viet Nam, Angola,
Mozambique and Poland.
6.
There are currently in Berlin some 45,000 refugees and asylum-seekers,
most of whom are housed at emergency reception centres and receive a social
security allowance.
Animosity towards foreigners, discrimination and tolerance
7.
From the complaints lodged with the Office of the Commissioner for
Migrants we can identify several areas in which ethnic discrimination has been
in evidence. 15 These findings correspond for the most part to those of the
commissions for equality of chances and non-discrimination set up a few years
ago in certain countries of Europe.