Germans ‘do not want Boateng as a neighbour’, politician says

Anti-immigration party boss makes claims about soccer player ahead of Euro 2016

German soccer player Jerome Boateng. Vice-chair of anti-immigration party Alternative for Germany has said Germans  would not want Boateng as their neighbour.  File photograph: Ina Fassbender/Reuters
German soccer player Jerome Boateng. Vice-chair of anti-immigration party Alternative for Germany has said Germans would not want Boateng as their neighbour. File photograph: Ina Fassbender/Reuters

People in Germany would not want soccer star Jerome Boateng as their neighbour, Alexander Gauland, vice-chair of anti-immigration party Alternative for Germany, said in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung newspaper on Sunday.

Boateng was born in Berlin to a Ghanaian father.

“People find him good as a football player but they don’t want a Boateng as their neighbour,” Mr Gauland told the Sunday edition of the newspaper.

Bayern Munich defender Boateng is a stalwart of Germany's national football team and is likely to feature in Germany's starting eleven at next month's European Championship, along with third-generation Turkish-German winger Mesut Ozil and other players with non-exclusively German backgrounds.

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Election results

Disenchantment with German chancellor Angela Merkel’s welcoming stance towards refugees helped to propel the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany to strong results in regional elections this year.

Mr Gauland's comments come days after supporters of German anti-Islam group Pegida criticised a confectioner's decision to print images of non-white soccer players on its chocolate bars instead of the usual picture of a blond-haired, blue-eyed boy.

Reuters