BERLIN (AP) — The police chief of the German city of Köln
was dismissed Friday amid mounting criticism of his force's handling
of a string of New Year's Eve sexual assaults and robberies blamed
largely on foreigners.
Wolfgang Albers had faced mounting criticism for the police response
to New Year's Eve attacks on women by groups of men within a
1,000-strong crowd described by police as predominantly Arab or North
African in origin.
Albers' dismissal comes amid a flurry of disconcerting allegations
over the behavior of foreigners at time when large groups of
migrants, mostly from Syria, are flooding into Europe.
Government
spokesman Georg Streiter said the chancellor wants "the whole
truth" about the events in Köln and "nothing should be
held back and nothing should be glossed over."
He said the trouble in Köln "doesn't just harm our rule of law
but also the great majority of completely innocent refugees who have
sought protection."
Reports of the harassment have fueled calls for tighter immigration
laws in Germany, particularly from politicians opposed to Chancellor
Angela Merkel's open-door policy that allowed nearly 1.1 million
people fleeing war and poverty to enter the country last year.
The German government said 31 suspects were briefly detained for
questioning after the New Year's Eve trouble, among them 18
asylum-seekers. The 31 included nine Algerians, eight Moroccans, five
Iranians, four Syrians, two Germans and one person each from Iraq,
Serbia and the United States.
None of the 31 has been accused of specifically committing sexual
assaults, the aspect of Köln's disturbances that attracted most
public outrage at home and abroad. Köln police say they have
received 170 criminal complaints connected to the New Year's
festivities, 120 of them sexual in nature.
Ministry spokesman Tobias Plate said those detained were believed to
have been members of the crowd in front of the Köln railway station
on New Year's Eve.
Plate said authorities were investigating whether the assaults were
connected to reports of similar offenses in other German cities.
Police in other European nations reported cases of similar trouble in
public places, particularly near train stations, fueling speculation
the events might have been coordinated.
In Sweden, police said at least 15 young women reported being groped
by groups of men on New Year's Eve in the city of Kalmar. Police
spokesman Johan Bruun said two men, both asylum-seekers, have been
told via interpreter that they are suspected of committing sexual
assaults. He said police are trying to identify other suspects.
In Finland, police said they received tipoffs on New Year's Eve that
about 1,000 predominantly Iraqi asylum seekers were intending to
gather near the main railway station in Helsinki and harass passing
women. Police there said they received three complaints of harassment
and detained several asylum-seekers at the scene for alleged
inappropriate behavior.
Police failed to mention the attacks around Köln's main train
station in their initial morning report on New Year's Day, describing
overnight festivities as "largely peaceful."
Albers, the former police chief, acknowledged that mistake earlier
this week, but he dismissed widespread criticism that his officers
reacted too slowly in response to reports of assaults and harassment
of women.
However, an internal police report published in German media
Thursday characterized Köln's police as overwhelmed and described
how women were forced to run through gantlets of drunken men outside
the station.
No comments:
Post a Comment