The German Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) has reported a shocking rise in the number of women who were the victims of violent crime last year. Many of the perpetrators are “groups of people” who reject the notion of equality between men and women—a subtle hint that the attackers are mostly migrants.
According to the report, published on Tuesday, November 19th, the number of female victims of domestic violence increased by 5.6% and reached 180,700 cases. The number of sex trafficking victims rose by 11.5% to 591. In addition, 938 women were victims of femicide—the murdering of females because of their gender—a one percent increase compared to the previous year. There was also a significant increase in politically motivated crime with misogynistic motives: 322 cases were registered, which is an increase of 56.3%.
In total, 144 sexual offences against women are committed every day, writes Apollo News.
According to the BKA, there is an increasing rejection within society of “equality,” in particular equality of the sexes. This, they say, can be explained by groups of people “who rigidly adhere to traditional norms” and perceive social change as “threatening.” Though no mention of migrant men or Muslim men is made, it is fairly clear that the report alludes to them.
As the number of migrants and citizens of migrant backgrounds becomes larger and larger within German society, crime statistics have increased.
As we previously reported, the number of crimes committed in Germany has risen to its highest rate since 2012. The country’s police chief, Dieter Romann, said that “in relation to the total population, non-Germans are statistically six times more likely to resort to knives in an attack than German citizens. And in sexual crimes, it is seven times more likely.”
The country has been riddled with a spate of knife crimes, committed by mostly Afghan and Syrian migrants, some of whom should have been deported, as their asylum claims had been rejected. The murder of a policeman in Mannheim in May, and the terrorist attack in Solingen in August, caused particular outrage. Though the left-liberal government announced tougher measures to curb migration and punish perpetrators, it was a move that was too little, too late.
In an interview with Die Zeit, the head of the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), Holger Münch said that “the security situation is tense.”
“Several developments in the past five years have led to a completely changed situation,” he said. The reasons, he adds, include a sharp increase in violent crimes, politically motivated crimes, and child and youth crime.
However, he downplayed the obvious links between migration and crime, saying that “mainly young men are always more criminal than the social average, regardless of whether they immigrated or were born here.” Completely ignoring the major cultural differences between recent Muslim migrants and European communities, Münch added that “people from other countries are not more criminal in principle. But people often bring various risk factors with them, such as poverty, low education, or a young age.”