Last week, someone was arrested for throwing a firebomb at the Chinese Communist Party‘s embassy in Berlin. German officials recently announced that the suspect is a Chinese man, motivated by protesting the persecution of ethnic minorities by the Chinese Communist Party.
On March 16, local Time, Berlin prosecutors released a statement saying that the alleged arson attack on the Chinese Embassy was carried out by a 42-year-old Chinese national. The man, who has been detained since the 11th, was motivated to set the fire to protest the Chinese government’s “policy toward ethnic minorities.
Prosecutors have not yet released any further details. But the attack may be related to the recent mass persecution of ethnic minorities in Xinjiang, which has received increasing international attention.
In addition to Xinjiang, the CCP’s persecution of Tibetan minorities is equally severe and has lasted much longer.
After the Trump administration qualified the persecution of Xinjiang as genocide, the Canadian and Dutch parliaments passed resolutions finding the CCP guilty of genocide.
According to several foreign media reports, Anti-Communist sentiment has taken shape in Germany, and Germany’s policy toward the Chinese Communist Party is expected to change dramatically once pro-Communist Chancellor Angela Merkel leaves office.
According to a poll conducted by the Czech Palacký University Olomouc last September, German respondents rated China (CCP) 35.4 out of 100 on a scale of 0 to 100, 62.5 percent of them had distrust of the CCP, and more than 46 percent of them had become more negative in their opinion of the CCP in the last three years.
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