Soon the German citizens will be told to shelter in place at night.
Via DW:
Freiburg, Germany prides itself on being the country’s “Green City,” a friendly, open place where a family of four is more likely to own a tandem bike than a station wagon. On Saturday, however, the small city on the edge of the Black Forest in the south of the country was splashed across the German media for a much different reason – the decision by a group of clubs and bars to keep refugees out.
According to reports, a wave of pickpocketing and sexual assaults preceded the decision in the university town where thousands of students flock to bars every evening. After a series of sexual assaults in the city of Cologne on New Year’s Eve, the line between welcoming refugees and providing security has become a flashpoint across the country.
City official balks
Regional newspaper “Badische Zeitung” wrote that the city had invited a group of club owners to a round table at city hall to discuss the ban.
The city official in charge of social affairs, Ulrich von Kirchbach, reacted angrily to the measure. Badische Zeitung quoted him as saying that “a rule such as this is contrary to rules against discrimination.”
Von Kirchbach added the caveat that “of course we cannot allow lawlessness anywhere,” and anyone who commits a crime “must be prosecuted under the law.”
While no one yet knows if the ban will affect any change in Freiburg nightlife, police chief for North Freiburg, Harry Hochuli, told “Badische Zeitung” about a similar measure from a decade past that worked well at curbing petty crime. A group of bars and clubs, alongside the city government and police department, organized themselves under the motto “Kicked out once, you’re not going back in anywhere,” meaning a ban from one location meant a flat ban across Freiburg.