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Cologne mayor's 'arm's length' advice

to avoid sex attacks draws ridicule

By Tim Hume and Carolin Schmid, CNN


Updated 1939 GMT (0339 HKT) January 6, 2016

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Police seek suspects in Cologne NYE sexual assaults 01:55

Story highlights

Fallout continues in Germany from apparently coordinated attacks on


women

More than 100 sex assaults and muggings were reported in Cologne on
New Year's Eve

The victims said the assailants were gangs of men who appeared to be
Arab or North African
Berlin (CNN)Cologne's mayor has come under fire for advising women to
stay "an arm's length" from male strangers after alleged sexual assaults and
muggings during New Year's Eve festivities in the German city.
Germany has been shocked by the apparently coordinated crime wave, in which
Cologne police received more than 100 criminal complaints from women who
said they had been sexually assaulted or robbed by gangs of men of Arab or

North African appearance in the city center during New Year's Eve festivities.
Cologne police would not elaborate Wednesday on the total number of crimes
reported, as the figure continued to rise.
Police have said that about a quarter of the complaints related to sexual
assaults, including a rape, and that they believed the assaults were probably
intended to distract the victims, allowing attackers to steal mobile phones and
other devices.
Three suspects had been identified and were being questioned, a police
representative told CNN. Police were working through a large amount of
cellphone footage from the evening to identify further suspects.
Similar attacks were reported in Hamburg on New Year's Eve, with 39 reported
sexual assaults and 14 robberies, according to police in the city, while police in
Stuttgart said two women had reported their phones were missing after they
were assaulted by a group of men of Arab appearance during New Year's
festivities there.
Read more: Reports of New Year's Eve sex assaults in Cologne fuel German
migrant debate

Mayor's comments slammed


The crimes, which an outraged German Chancellor Angela Merkel labeled
"disgusting" and Cologne's police chief described as offenses "of a totally new
dimension," have sparked a firestorm in Germany.

A police car passes the central railway station in Cologne, Germany near where
a series of sex assaults allegedly occurred on New Year's Eve.
The episode has prompted angry protests, fueled public debate about
Germany's welcoming stance to migrants and unleashed a wave of anger at
authorities and the media for their perceived reticence in addressing the crimes,
out of a misplaced sense of political correctness.

Cologne Mayor Henriette Reker appeared to pour oil on the fire with her
remarks at a news conference Tuesday, at which she addressed the New Year's
crimes and discussed plans to issue guidelines for behavior during Cologne's
famous Carnival next month, when hundreds of thousands of revelers are
expected on the city's streets.
When asked how women could protect themselves, she suggested keeping "a
certain distance of more than an arm's length" from unknown men.
She reiterated her advice at an appearance on German public service
broadcaster ZDF's "Heute Journal" program Tuesday, when she said: "Women
would also be smart not to go and embrace everyone that you meet and who
seems to be nice. Such offers could be misunderstood, and that is something
every woman and every girl should protect herself from."

'An arm's length'


Her comments were met with derision on social media, with the hashtag
#einearmlaenge ("an arm's length") circulating to mock her suggestion for
appearing to place responsibility for the attacks on the victims.

German Justice Minister Heiko Maas addresses the assaults in Cologne.


German Justice Minister Heiko Maas was also critical of the comments,
tweeting: "I don't think much of the how-to-behave tips for women such as
#anarm'slength. It is not women who are responsible, but the perpetrators."
Reker later issued a statement in response to the criticism, saying that media
coverage had given the impression that her prevention initiatives were limited to
behavior tips for women, which was not the case.
She had also explained at the news conference Tuesday the need "to explain to
people from other cultures that the jolly and frisky attitude during our Carnival is
not a sign of sexual openness."

Broadcaster: 'It was our failure'

German broadcaster ZDF also issued an apology Tuesday for failing to report
on the attacks in a timely fashion on its "Heute Journal" show, after criticism that
the media had neglected to adequately cover the incidents because of
sensitivities concerning the alleged ethnic identities of the assailants.
In a statement, deputy editor Elmar Thevessen said the network had failed by
not reporting on the attacks during the Monday evening broadcast.
"It was our failure that the news broadcast at 7 p.m. did not inform about the
attacks on New Year's Eve," read the statement.
"The editorial department of 'Heute' decided to delay the report until today
because of an emergency meeting to gain time for additional interviews. This,
however, was a clear misjudgment."

'They touched us everywhere'

German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere also criticized Cologne police for
their handling of the incident Wednesday, saying in a news conference that
police "cannot work that way."

Inside march against Islam in Germany 02:24


Victims of the assaults in Cologne said this week that they feared being killed or
raped by the attackers. One woman said she was too scared to go out alone
after the ordeal.
"The men surrounded us and started to grab our behinds and touch our
crotches," she said.
"They touched us everywhere. I wanted to take my friend and leave. I turned
around, and in that moment, someone grabbed my bag."
Germany has taken the largest numbers of migrants from the influx that has
created a crisis on Europe's borders, but many Germans have expressed
opposition to the sudden arrival of so many, predominantly Muslim, migrants,
questioning their ability to adapt to a European way of life.

Read more: Germany's anti-migrant protest: 'We don't want to be strangers in


our own country'
Read more: Europe's migration crisis
CNN's Carol Jordan, Frederik Pleitgen, Atika Shubert and Claudia Otto
contributed to this report.

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