Hartmut König, the mayor of the town with 4,600 inhabitants, tells German broadcaster NDR in an interview how admitting so many migrants has had a negative impact on the town.
“It’s quite simply the behaviour. For example, in shops things are stolen. I experienced it myself: three refugees walking on the pavement, not making enough room for a woman with a pushchair and a child coming in their direction. They make no room; she has to move onto the street to get around them,” the mayor says.
“That’s just one incident, but it shows the entire picture. Besides that, they leave piles of rubbish and use every available space to sit around and drink beer,” he adds.
“Helping makes sense, it’s our ecclesiastical obligation, but the way things are going — that these people are being left to themselves, walking around, sitting everywhere in the city; no one recognises our city anymore — Boostedt used to be a beautiful place,” an elderly man says.
Instead of what was told, a lot of them don’t work, are poorly educated and are not refugees. The migrant crisis is a slowly unfolding disaster for Germany.