Shocking statistics were announced in Frankfurt.
New crime statistics for the German city of Frankfurt, V4na.com , contain shocking data on foreigners and serious crime, including a special figure that says
foreigners are responsible for 100 percent of serious sexual violence crimes and 57.4 percent of all crimes.
The data shows that even in the case of the most serious crimes, well over half of the suspects are foreigners, i.e. persons without a German passport. The other suspects (42.6 percent) are German citizens, but the data does not track whether these German suspects have a migration background, the RMX News news portal points out
As for crimes against life, 54 percent of the murders were committed by foreigners, while they were responsible for 64.8 percent of other homicide cases.
Foreigners are also far overrepresented in sexual crimes in Frankfurt: according to the data, they committed 64.1 percent of rape crimes, and foreigners were responsible for 100 percent of serious sexual violence cases.
In the case of sexual harassment, foreigners were responsible for 64.4 percent of cases, while for 57.1 percent of abuse against minors.
The proportion of people with a migration background is also very high in robberies:
65.5 percent of robberies, 75.6 percent of serious robberies, 93 percent of car thefts, 87.5 percent of bag thefts, 93 percent of pickpocketing, 87.5 percent of violent burglaries, 80 percent of daytime burglaries and 72 percent of street thefts .9 percent can be attributed to foreigners,
but migrants also committed 75 percent of counterfeiting-related crimes and 62.5 percent of sexual extortion cases.
Foreigners were also responsible for 83.3 percent of human trafficking and forced prostitution.
A spokesman for the Frankfurt police told the German newspaper Bild:
Here is the airport. This is a gate. If violations of immigration laws are excluded from the statistics, the proportion of non-German suspects is 57.4 percent. This number is well above the national average of 35 percent.
Frankfurt has a higher proportion of foreigners than the rest of Germany, but the city's statistics may point to what lies ahead for the rest of Germany if the foreign population continues to grow. Frankfurt is not the only province where this trend can be seen in relation to foreign criminals, reports the InfoWars news portal.
German federal crime statistics also show that foreigners are far overrepresented in serious crimes such as murder, rape, robbery and assault.
Last week, the Bavarian Minister of the Interior, Joachim Herrmann, also spoke about the fact that foreigners are responsible for crimes in a much higher proportion than their proportion within the population. "We will not accept an increase in crime, even if it is a national trend, for which foreigners and immigrants in particular are responsible," Herrmann said.
Crime statistics make it clear that uncontrolled immigration also has a negative impact on the security situation
he declared.
Herrmann emphasized, "it is particularly important that those foreigners who pose a threat to public safety be taken out of the country as quickly as possible after serving their sentence. In addition, a fundamental change of direction is finally needed in the refugee policy and, above all, an effective curbing of illegal migration," he added.
As for sexual violence and rape, more and more women are becoming victims in Germany due to mass immigration. According to data published earlier this year, since 2015, 8,590 women and men have been raped or sexually assaulted by foreigners.
In response to the data, Christoph de Vries, Christian Democrat (CDU) representative, who is also a member of the Home Affairs Committee, said:
It is clear that the risk of women becoming victims of rape or other sexual crimes in Germany has increased significantly in recent years due to asylum-seeking migration from Arab and Maghreb countries.
Cover photo:
A man is pulled over by the police at the main railway station in Cologne on New Year's Eve, December 31, 2017. Due to the attacks against women during the 2015 New Year's party in the same place, security measures were tightened at New Year's Eve street events in German cities. (MTI/EPA/Sascha Steinbach)