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A portrait of Görlitz, the city that could elect Germany’s first AfD mayor

Will the picturesque eastern city, used as a backdrop for Hollywood films, have another claim to fame on Sunday?

A portrait of Görlitz, the city that could elect Germany's first AfD mayor
Görlitz' Untermarkt, where the 2012 'Measuring the World' was filmed. Photo: DPA

Its cobblestone lanes and Baroque architecture are so quaint that Hollywood directors often come calling, but the German town of Görlitz may soon have a new claim to notoriety. 

A run-off election in the small city of around 55,000 people on the Polish border on Sunday could end in the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party winning its first mayoral seat.

SEE ALSO: Is Germany one step closer to having its first AfD mayor?

Mainstream parties have thrown their support behind the centre-right contender from Chancellor Angela Merkel's CDU party, meaning AfD candidate Sebastian Wippel, 36, is seen as unlikely to triumph.

But Wippel won the first round in late May with 36 percent of the vote, sending shockwaves through the country already bracing for a strong AfD showing in Görlitz 's Saxony state in a September election.

AfD candidate Sebastian Wippel. Photo: DPA

His closest competitor, 51-year-old Octavian Ursu of the CDU, drew 30 percent and will face Wippel in the run-off.

Green candidate Fransizka Schubert, 37, came in third place with 27.9 percent of the vote. 

However Schubert, whose platform included developing transportation and jobs in the oft-called Europastadt (Europe city), announced on May 31st that she would not be running again.

She cast her support behind Ursu, writing that “Politics means finding compromises.”

SEE ALSO: Meet the east German Greens candidate offering another alternative

The Romanian-born Ursu, who came to Germany as a musician in 1990, argues
that only a “family-friendly Görlitz  that's open to the world” will manage to prosper.

Leading filmmakers and authors have led a call for Görlitz  voters to shun the anti-immigration, anti-Muslim party or risk isolation by the arts community and tourists.

British director Stephen Daldry, who filmed “The Reader” starring Kate Winslet partly in Görlitz , actor Daniel Brühl (“Goodbye Lenin”) and writer Bernhard Schlink have all signed an anti-AfD petition: “Don't give in to hate and hostility, conflict and exclusion.”

The city, which was spared damage by Allied bombing during World War II, has also played backdrop to Hollywood blockbusters including “Inglorious Basterds” and “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”

With hoards of visitors hoping to catch a glance of stars like Clooney, Emma Thompson or Jeff Goldblum at work, the town nicknamed Görliwood has since become a tourist magnet with its spruced up historic city centre nestled on the River Neisse.

SEE ALSO: German stars call on voters to shun far-right AfD in Görliwood

Tourists in Görlitz' picturesque old town. Photo: DPA

'Win back trust'

Despite the Tinseltown glamour, Görlitz  is not immune to many of the problems plaguing Saxony and other regions of Germany's former communist east.

Almost 30 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall, Görlitz has suffered from an exodus of talented young people to the richer west.

A burly ex-policeman with close cropped hair and a passion for martial arts, Wippel has adopted the campaign motto: “I won't forget anyone, and certainly not our Görlitzers!”

He is surfing a wave of support, particularly in the east, for the AfD, which has railed against Merkel's 2015 decision to allow in around 1.2 million asylum seekers.

The party is now represented in all 16 of Germany's regional parliaments and polling as the most popular party in both Saxony and Brandenburg state, which will both go to the polls on September 1, followed by Thuringia on October 27th.

The battle for Görlitz's city hall has taken on outsize importance as a bellwether for the three state elections, with the future of Merkel's fragile right-left coalition potentially hanging in the balance.

Görlitz is a picturesque destination, still attracting many tourists over the summer months. 

Wippel said he was not taking the petition against him very seriously, calling it a hollow gesture “by people who don't live in Görlitz”.

Ursu of the CDU told AFP he would “strive to win back the trust” lost by the traditional parties.

'Uncontrolled immigration'

Saxony has received more assistance from the European Union than any of Germany's states, with 2.75 billion euros earmarked for the period 2014-2020.

Nevertheless, the eurosceptic AfD managed to come out on top in the European elections on May 26.

“A whole generation — my generation — is no longer there,” Wippel told AFP, promising to “make them come back” if he becomes mayor.

One look around its tidy streets proves his point. Many shops have “for sale” signs in the window and the locals seem overwhelmingly aged.

A look at Görlitz's old town, leading to the town hall. Photo: DPA

Wippel said his strategy to make Görlitz, which was a major regional trading hub in the Middle Ages, more attractive would include placing a premium on security and fighting immigration.

Görlitz has seen an influx of around 1,000 refugees, including hundreds from war-ravaged Syria, which has made many locals uneasy.

“Things have changed a lot in this town in a short time, particularly with regard to uncontrolled immigration,” said an AfD voter in his 50s who gave his name only as Karsten.

He said his choice on Sunday was for the party “that takes the time to listen” to residents.

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POLITICS

Top UN court throws out Gaza ‘genocide’ suit against Germany

The UN's top court Tuesday threw out Nicaragua's request for emergency measures to stop Germany from sending military supplies to Israel because of its action in the Gaza war.

Top UN court throws out Gaza 'genocide' suit against Germany

International Court of Justice presiding judge Nawaf Salam said the circumstances presented to the court did not warrant “provisional measures”.

Nicaragua hauled Germany before the ICJ to demand emergency measures to stop Germany sending Israel weapons and other assistance that could be used in the devastating Gaza war. Nicaragua accused Germany of violating the 1948 international genocide convention.

Nicaragua targeted Germany rather than Israel’s main ally, the United States, because Washington did not recognise ICJ jurisdiction in the case, Managua’s lawyers said.

Arms to Israel

Lawyers from the two countries clashed at the court this month, with Nicaragua saying Germany was “pathetic” for providing weapons to Israel and aid to Gazans. Berlin responded that Israel’s security was at the “core” of its foreign policy and that Nicaragua had “grossly distorted” Germany’s supply of military aid to Israel.

“Germany only supplies arms based on a meticulous scrutiny that far exceeds the demands of international law,” said Tania von Uslar-Gleichen, a German representative to the ICJ. Those supplies are “subject to a continuous evaluation of the situation on the ground”, she added.

Nicaragua requested five emergency measures, including that Germany “immediately suspend its aid to Israel, in particular its military assistance including military equipment”.

The judges agreed with Berlin, saying “the court notes that Germany states that it has fulfilled the obligation incumbent on states parties to the Genocide Convention to prevent the occurrence of genocide.” In fact, it noted that “as stated by Germany” there had been a significant decrease in its supply of military material since November 2023.

Gaza genocide claims

The war began on October 7th with an unprecedented Hamas attack that resulted in the deaths of about 1,170 people in Israel, according to an AFP tally of Israeli official figures.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has killed at least 34,488 people in Gaza, mostly women and children, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

Cases relating to the Gaza war brought before the ICJ are closely followed. In another procedure, South Africa accused Israel — which like the United States is not a member of the court — of perpetuating genocide in the Gaza Strip.

Israel “categorically” denies the South African accusations, which include responsibility for starvation. In that case, the court called on Israel to do everything in its power to prevent genocide and recently ordered the country to “ensure urgent humanitarian assistance” in Gaza without delay.

Though ICJ decisions are binding, the court has no mechanism to enforce them. For example, it ordered Russia to cease its invasion of Ukraine, in vain.

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