A/HRC/14/43/Add.2
appointed by a Ministry and that the Agency may be overly responsive to the majority in
parliament.
D.
The National Integration Plan
24.
In July 2006, the German Chancellor convened a high-level integration summit,
gathering representatives of civil society and migrant communities, as well as
representatives of the Federal Government, the Länder and municipalities to discuss ways
of addressing the question of migration in Germany and propose concrete actions in this
area. The proposals put forward at the summit were integrated into a National Integration
Plan, formally introduced in 2007. Most of the Special Rapporteur’s interlocutors
recognized that the summit and the Plan fostered a paradigm shift in the way the question
of migration was addressed in Germany, as it recognized openly for the first time that
Germany is a country of migration.
25.
The National Integration Plan brought together for the first time an array of actors
dealing with this question: the Federal Government, the Länder, local authorities, migrants,
institutions and organizations from science, media, culture, sports, trade and industry, trade
unions, and religious groups. According to many authorities, the Plan recognizes
integration as creating responsibilities not only for migrants, but also for the host society
and the Government. It outlined a number of actions that would support the goal of
promoting integration, including the creation of integration courses for foreigners,4
promoting German education at an early age, securing quality education and professional
training, etc.
26.
Despite the general recognition that integration should be a two-way process
involving both migrants and German society, a number of civil society organizations have
pointed out that the debate so far has focused solely on the “responsibility” of migrants to
integrate, a term which in many instances is interchangeably used to mean assimilation.
According to many of the Special Rapporteur’s interlocutors, similarly to the provisions of
the National Action Plan against Racism, the question of broader socio-economic structures
that enable a proper integration of migrants has generally been avoided.
E.
The National Action Plan against Racism
27.
In line with the provisions of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action,
Germany has prepared a National Action Plan against Racism covering a range of actions
to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. The Plan
draws on a number of existing programmes, including “Competent for Democracy –
Advisory Networks to Oppose Right-Wing Extremism” and “XENOS – Integration and
Diversity”. According to the authorities, the Plan is intended to be a comprehensive aid to
prevent and protect against violence and discrimination by clearly demonstrating that
neither policymakers, the judicial system nor the society at large are willing to accept or
tolerate such phenomena.
28.
Many civil society organizations pointed out that the National Action Plan against
Racism has a narrow focus on right-wing extremism and is overly concentrated on the role
of political parties, while almost entirely avoiding the key issue of indirect and structural
4
8
Integration courses were in fact already initiated in 2005 with the introduction of the new Residence
Act. This concept was subsequently expanded and improved with the introduction of the National
Integration Plan.
GE.10-11624