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‘Very restrained’: German fans lukewarm on World Cup

Jens Mueller has been following World Cups since the 1970s and says he has never seen "so little enthusiasm" from fellow Germans for their team at a major tournament.

World Cup Qatar Germany
Two Germany fans watch the Germany v Japan match at a pub in Berlin. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Lena Lachnit

The mood would usually be “a bit more euphoric”, the 58-year-old says at a small, crowded Berlin pub where he watched Germany snatch a crucial draw against Spain on Sunday.

“It’s very restrained and I am used to it being different,” he says.

Not just in pubs, but at home too, viewership numbers suggest that football-mad Germany has had so far a muted response to the one of the most controversial World Cups in history.

Concerns over human rights in host nation Qatar, including over the treatment of migrant workers, have dogged preparations for the tournament and sparked calls by some of Germany’s football fan clubs to boycott games.

The timing of some matches — with Germany’s opener against Japan at 2:00 pm on a weekday — and the European winter have ruled out boisterous, beer-fuelled outdoor viewing, including at the traditional gathering point for such occasions, the capital’s Brandenburg Gate.

A row over a dropped plan by Germany’s captain Manuel Neuer to wear a rainbow armband in support of LGBTQ rights further soured the mood, as accusations flew at home against the squad for failing to take a firmer stand against FIFA’s threat of disciplinary action.

When Japan stunned Germany with a 2-1 win at their opening game, the team came under renewed fire for failing to focus on matters on the bus.

“I know not everyone is behind us,” striker Kai Havertz said after the Japan shocker.

READ ALSO: Living in Germany: World Cup rainbows, pumpkin slaughter and a nation of savers

‘Everything is possible’

With fears rising of a repeat of their campaign in Russia 2018 when Germany unceremoniously crashed out in the group stage, the team resuscitated their chances of making it through with a draw against Spain — a game watched by 17 million at home.

The audience was significantly up from the first Japan v Germany match, which drew just 9.23 million.

But viewership for the crunch match in a Sunday evening primetime slot still fell way short of the last World Cup in Russia — when 26 million on average tuned in for each of Germany’s three group games.

On the streets of Berlin, residents appear to confirm the negative vibes around this World Cup.

“Generally I won’t follow the World Cup in Qatar simply because I don’t approve of it,” says Angelika Bock, 46.

Like her, Tobias Kliegel, 42, says he won’t be watching because he “rejects the awarding of the competition to Qatar” and because “it’s an inappropriate time in winter when Christmas is coming”.

“I’m not in the mood for this at all,” he says.

Scores of bars that would normally do good business during a football tournament have sensed the disaffection and decided against showing the games,

Bar owner Birgit Arndt, 65, has decided to keep screening the matches from Qatar.

“I love it when football fans come here and are nice to each other and know that it’s about the game and not any power struggles,” she says.

After the full time whistle in the Spain game the mood changed at little. Bernhard Gwosdz, 55, was celebrating an “exciting” performance from his team and said he was “very optimistic about the next game”.

Gwosdz is watching every game he can, but he too admits he finds the World Cup’s staging in the Gulf state “problematic”.

While it comes down to a “personal decision” for Mueller, he says he can understand why others are boycotting the tournament.

But he believes that the resistance of German fans who have so far shunned the tournament could start to weaken if they do advance.

“By the semi-final at the latest everything is forgotten. Then it’s just about the World Cup.

“I think Germany will qualify in second (from the group) and after that everything is possible,” says Müller.

By Sebastien Ash

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SPORT

Police stop Turkish fan march in Berlin over far-right salute

Berlin police said they stopped Turkish fans parading Saturday ahead of their Euro 2024 quarter-final after some made a salute associated with a far-right movement -- the same gesture that led to a Turkish player being suspended.

Police stop Turkish fan march in Berlin over far-right salute

“During the Turkish fans’ march, the ‘wolf salute’ was made en masse. The police therefore stopped the march and urged the fans to stop making this sign,” the German capital’s police force said on social media site X.

“A fan walk is not a platform for political messages,” the police wrote.

The Berlin police also announced on X that fan zones were being closed due to the weather forecast, adding that these could be reopened “depending on weather conditions”.

The match between Turkey and the Netherlands on Saturday evening was overshadowed by security concerns and diplomatic tensions between Germany and Turkey due to the debate surrounding the wolf salute – three fingers held together with the index and little finger raised to form a wolf’s head.

The gesture is associated with the far-right ultra-nationalist Turkish organisation Grey Wolves, a youth branch of Turkey’s Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), which Germany’s government considers racist and anti-Semitic.

However, the salute is not banned in Germany.

Turkish defender Merih Demiral made the gesture after his second goal in the round of 16 match against Austria and was banned for the next two matches.

Germany’s interior minister Nancy Faeser, condemned Demiral’s actions, saying “the symbol of Turkish right-wing extremists has no place in our stadiums” on X.

Due to criticism of the gesture from the German government, Ankara summoned the German ambassador to Turkey and the following day, the Foreign Office in Berlin summoned the Turkish envoy.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was also expected to attend the match on Saturday evening. The MHP is an ally of Erdogan’s ruling AK Party.

Germany, which is home to Europe’s largest Turkish immigrant community, has had to deal with expressions of support for the Grey Wolves from some of its residents.

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