Angela Merkel's Response To Donald Trump's Muslim Ban Puts Theresa May To Shame

She warns of a 'general suspicion against people of a certain belief'.
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Angela Merkel has condemned Donald Trump’s ban on people travelling to America from seven Muslim countries, after Theresa May has doggedly tried to avoid commenting in detail on it.

The German Chancellor said his executive order went against her “interpretation of the basic tenets of international refugee support and cooperation”.

She told a press conference on Monday: “The necessary and decisive fight against terrorism does not justify a general suspicion against people of a certain belief ― in this case people of Muslim belief or people from a certain country...

“That way of thinking is against my interpretation of the basic tenets of international refugee support and cooperation.”

Angela Merkel said Trump's executive order was 'against my interpretation of the basic tenants of international refugee support and cooperation'
Angela Merkel said Trump's executive order was 'against my interpretation of the basic tenants of international refugee support and cooperation'
Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters

By contrast, May has said simply: “We do not agree with this kind of approach.”

She had initially dodged questions over Trump’s travel and refugee ban but finally criticised the executive order more than 12 hours later.

It was signed on Friday, the day May had visited Trump in an effort to establish close ties with Trump as Britain prepares to leave the EU. The pair even held hands briefly during the visit.

Merkel’s comments follow her phone call with Trump on Saturday, in which she reportedly set out the details of the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention, which calls on signatories to take in those fleeing war.

Trump’s ban applies to those trying to reach America from Syria, where the bloody civil war has forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes.

May and Trump in the Oval Office
May and Trump in the Oval Office
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire

“The Geneva refugee convention requires the international community to take in war refugees on humanitarian grounds,” a spokesperson for Merkel later said. “All signatory states are obligated to do. The German government explained this policy in their call.”

May also invited Trump on a state visit to Britain during her Washington trip - something more than a million people have now signed a petition to protest.

A huge crowd gathered outside Downing Street on Monday evening to call for the visit to be cancelled.

Boris Johnson was forced to defend the visit - and try to avoid commenting on the ban - in the House of Commons as MPs attacked him.

Labour MP Mike Gapes called her “Theresa the appeaser” while Dennis Skinner said she was “walking hand in hand with a fascist”.

Johnson was urged to “have the guts to speak out for the sake of history” but he resisted, only saying that Trump’s ban was “wrong”.

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