Germany plans to simplify the procedure for deporting migrants who have not received citizenship who justify terrorism, German Interior Minister Nancy Feser told.
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“Anyone who does not have a German passport and who glorifies terrorist acts here should, if possible, be expelled and deported,” Feser said.
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She recalled that social networks in Germany celebrated the attack of the Palestinian Hamas movement on Israel, as well as the recent knife attack in the city of Mannheim. Such online violence fuels a climate of violence that could push extremist people to commit further acts of violence, Feser said.
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“Discordant Islamists who are spiritually in the Stone Age have no place in our country,” Feser said.
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Feser later wrote on the social network X that the government would introduce appropriate amendments to the legislation on Wednesday.
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On May 31, in Mannheim, Germany, Afghan Suleiman Atai attacked the famous critic of Islamism, Michael Stürzenberger, with a knife during a rally of the right-wing movement PAX Europa. As a result of the incident, six people were injured, including Stürzenberger, and a few days later police officer Ruven L. died from his wounds. The attacker was wounded by police with a firearm.