Merkel REFUSES to change her migration policy despite terror attacks
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Thursday rebuffed calls to reverse her welcoming stance toward refugees after a series of brutal attacks in the country.
Merkel, who interrupted her summer holiday to face the media in Berlin, said the four assaults within a week were 'shocking, oppressive and depressing' but not a sign that authorities had lost control.
The German leader said the assailants 'wanted to undermine our sense of community, our openness and our willingness to help people in need'.
'We firmly reject this,' she said at a wide-ranging news conference.
Merkel: Attacks by refugees 'mock country that took them in'
Merkel repeated her rallying cry from last year when she opened the borders to people fleeing war and persecution, many from Syria, which brought nearly 1.1 million migrants and refugees to Germany in 2015.
'I am still convinced today that "we can do it" - it is our historic duty and this is a historic challenge in times of globalisation,' she said.
'We have already achieved very, very much in the last 11 months.' (YOU BET!!)
Merkel was speaking after a axe rampage, a shooting spree, a knife attack and a suicide bombing stunned Germany, leaving 13 people dead, including three assailants, and dozens wounded.
Three of the four attackers were asylum seekers, and two of the assaults were claimed by the Islamic State group.
Merkel said that she would not allow jihadists, following a series of deadly attacks in France, Belgium, Turkey and the US state of Florida, to keep her government from being guided by reason and compassion.
'Despite the great unease these events inspire, fear can't be the guide for political decisions,' she said.
'It is my deep conviction that we cannot let our way of life be destroyed.'
Merkel said those who carried out attacks 'mocked the country that took them in'.
She vowed Germany will 'stick to our principles' and give shelter to those who deserve it.
'The terrorists want to make us lose sight of what is important to us, break down our cohesion and sense of community as well as inhibiting our way of life, our openness and our willingness take in people who are in need,' she told a news conference for which she interrupted her vacation.
'They see hatred and fear between cultures and they see hatred and fear between religions. We stand decisively against that,' she added.
Credit to Mailonline.co.uk
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