by Soeren Kern • May 10, 2019 at
5:00 am
- Critics say that the
bill, as it currently stands, would not only create a legal
backdoor for polygamous migrants to become German citizens,
but would effectively legalize the practice for Muslim
immigrants. The changes would, consequently, enshrine into
German law two parallel legal systems, one based on German
Civil Law and another based on Islamic Sharia law.
- In May 2013, RTL,
one of Germany's leading media companies, aired a documentary
about how Muslims in Germany use polygamy to commit welfare
fraud. Muslim men residing in Germany routinely bring two,
three or four women from across the Muslim world to Germany, and
then marry them in the presence of a Muslim cleric. Once in
Germany, the women request social welfare benefits, including
the cost of a separate home for themselves and for their
children, on the claim of being a "single parent with
children."
- "The acquisition
of German citizenship is more than just a formality, but also
expresses the recognition of a system of values. Polygamy is a
form of marriage that disregards the rights of women and is
incompatible with this order of values. Therefore, there is a need
for legislative action here." — Secretary General of the
Free Democratic Party, Linda Teuteberg.
- "If people who
are arriving here are married to several women according to
foreign laws, we currently have to recognize these marriages.
This is an unacceptable contradiction. We cannot just accept
polygamy because another legal system allows this. We do not
want to accept harems in Germany." — Bavarian Justice
Minister Winfried Bausback.
The German
government has withdrawn proposed legislation that would have
banned immigrants in polygamous marriages from obtaining German
citizenship. The Deputy Leader of the anti-mass-migration party
Alternative for Germany (AfD), Beatrix von Storch (pictured), said:
"To allow Islamic polygamy in Germany is a betrayal of our
Western values and a slap in the face for equal rights."
(Photo by Ronny Hartmann/Getty Images)
The German government has withdrawn proposed
legislation that would have banned immigrants in polygamous
marriages from obtaining German citizenship. The proposed ban had
been included in draft changes to Germany's naturalization law, but
was quietly removed from the final text, apparently in the
interests of political correctness and multiculturalism.
Although German law clearly prohibits polygamy for
German nationals, some have argued that the law is unclear as to
whether the law applies to foreign nationals living in Germany. The
interior ministers of Germany's 16 states had unanimously called on
the German government to clarify the issue by enshrining into law a
blanket ban on German citizenship for polygamous migrants.
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