Merkel is expected to leave office in the coming weeks after 16 years in power. She is preparing to step down with a legacy defined primarily by her handling of a series of crises.
Asked in an interview with German broadcaster Deutsche Welle posted late Sunday which crises she found the most personally challenging, Merkel identified the coronavirus pandemic and âthe large number of refugees who arrived, which I donât like to describe as a crisis â people are people.â
âYes, we managed it,â she said. ââWeâ were really many, many people in Germany who joined in â many mayors, many volunteers.â
Merkel acknowledged that there were problems, citing the 2016 New Year celebrations in Cologne, where hundreds of women complained of being groped and robbed, mostly by groups of migrants.
âWe did of course see that not everything went ideally, and there are serious incidents â if I think of the New Yearâs night in Cologne, which perhaps has stuck in peopleâs minds,â Merkel added. âBut on the whole, we have wonderful examples of successful human development,â she said, pointing to migrants who have finished high school in Germany.
She conceded that the overall picture on migration remains problematic, with the issues that cause people to flee still unresolved and the European Union having failed to establish a single migration and asylum system.
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