2006年VOA标准英语-Trying to Keep Things Friendly: German Official(在线收听) |
By Catherine Drew
------------------------------------------------ The Kreuzberg area of Berlin is home to around 400,000 Turkish immigrants, the largest Turkish community outside of Turkey. The Turkish Council says racially motivated attacks against the community are a very real problem.
Mustafa Besirli says far-right groups are a concern. “The problem is the Nazis. The Nazis are not good for Germany; not good for people from other countries, like me,” Besirli said. “Nazis in Berlin is a dangerous problem.” Government figures show that since 2005, there has been a 25 percent increase in violence from far-right groups nationwide with nearly 1,000 incidents. Moctar Kamara from the African Council says visiting fans must be realistic about the welcome they will receive in Germany. “All Germans are not racist, some are friendly, but we have a minority and it's dangerous and we have to say, we have to take care,” Kamara said. “ We have a region in Germany where as a foreigner we have attacks and it's not OK.” There are fears that on the field, teams such as Togo will receive a less-than-warm welcome. German fans are known for their racist chanting against their own non-German players, and even other predominantly white European teams. German fans are not the only ones guilty of such behavior. FIFA, the world governing body for the sport, has long fought against racism, particularly among Spanish, Italian and eastern European fans. FIFA admits there has been a surge of such behavior as more players from Africa and Latin America are signed by elite European clubs. ”Each attack is one too much and at special points where we think might happen, we will have police. I don't think we can say there are places you can't go in,” he said. “Every city has places that you shouldn't go, but I think it will be no problem for our guests. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/6/32926.html |