Berlin - Germany's government strongly condemned on
Wednesday the courtroom murder a week ago of a woman wearing a
headscarf as anger continued in the Muslim community over her death.
Marwa el-Shirbini, 31, an Egyptian, was stabbed 18 times by a
German man of Russian descent as she was about to give evidence in a
court case against him on July 1 in the German city Dresden.
At a government news conference in Berlin, a spokesman said, 'This
repulsive crime shocks and appalls us.'
He denied that Berlin had previously remained silent about the
case, which has led to anti-German demonstrations in Egypt.
He said Chancellor Angela Merkel's head of minority affairs, Maria
Boehmer, had earlier voiced the government's condolences to Elwy
Okaz, 32, husband of the pregnant Muslim woman, and the German
ambassador to Egypt had attended a memorial service for her.
In addition, Merkel would address the issue when she met in
L'Aquila, Italy with Egypt's President Hosny Mubarak, he said.
The spokesman added that prosecutors had established that the
accused man was a fanatical racist.
Germany condemned rightist extremism, xenophobia and hatred of
Islam, but these were also issues where the whole of society had to
fight back, he said.
El-Shirbini had sued her attacker for insult after he abused her
for wearing a scarf. Her husband was seriously wounded as he tried to
save her in the courtroom.
Aiman Mazyek, secretary of one Islamic group, the Central Council
of Muslims, attacked the initial reaction of the government.
He told a newspaper, the Tagesspiegel, that government spokesman
Thomas Steg had claimed Monday the facts were unclear.
'The evidence of an Islamophobic crime is overwhelming,' said
Mazyek. 'Caution is fine, but that sounded close to wriggling out.'
A coordinating council representing Germany's four main national
Islamic bodies called Wednesday for silent vigils to mark
el-Shirbini's murder, saying, 'Marwa's death has made us all both
scared and horrified.
'Politicians in our country have to start dealing seriously with
hatred of Islam.'
The council charged that she was a victim of the hate websites
that had sprung up after Germany had tried to prevent women teachers
wearing head-scarfs.
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