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EVENTS

Trump and Putin take centre stage at Germany’s Rose Monday parades

The 'Rosenmontag' processions aim for the heart of what is going wrong in the world with satirical floats. This year Trump and Putin were among the parade’s main attractions.

karneval float of Vladimir Putin with AfD leader
Carnival float depicts Russian President Vladimir Putin with AfD leader Alice Weidel and Sahra Wagenknecht. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Arne Dedert

In the carnival strongholds of Cologne, Düsseldorf and Mainz, parade routes were lined with hundreds of thousands of costumed revellers for the Rose Monday processions. 

In Cologne, the first spectators had already gathered in the city centre at dark, several hours before the start of the “Zoch” to secure good seats.

Düsseldorf wagon builder Jacques Tilly delivered the most brutal and expressive wagons – among them Russia’s President Vladimir Putin allows himself to be orally satisfied by Church Patriarch Kirill, and Donald Trump holds a US flag carved into the shape of a swastika.

READ ALSO: The calls you’ll hear at Carnival – and what they mean

Trump float at Carnival

Trump holds a US flag carved into a swastika at Carnival. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Federico Gambarini
 

Tilly told the DPA that with his motif to Putin, he wanted to denounce the joint responsibility of the Russian Orthodox Church for the war of aggression against Ukraine. “The cooperation between the state and the church is, of course, disastrous. Kirill creates, so to speak, the ideological background for the war.” 

About his portrayal of Trump with a swastika motif, Tilly said: “If this man gets the trigger again, he will seek revenge across the country and probably damage American democracy beyond recognition. That’s totalitarian, and that’s why this comparison isn’t far off, I think.”

On the subject of the far-right AfD, Tilly opted for a clown who takes off the AfD’s friendly mask, and behind it a skull appears. 

A clown strips the AfD of it’s friendly mask at Carnival. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Federico Gambarini

In the Cologne procession, Chancellor Olaf Scholz was seen on a float as a sloth in a hammock and Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock as an elephant in a china shop. 

READ ALSO: ‘Cologne is colourful’ – Carnical kicks off amid rainy weather

In Mainz, Economy Minister Robert Habeck was portrayed as Flying Robert, who is losing his grip on the ground with his heating law. (Flying Robert is a character from a German children’s story in which a boy goes outside during a storm, and the wind catching his umbrella sends him flying away.)

Robert Habeck as flying Robert.

Robert Habeck as flying Robert at Carnival. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Arne Dedert

AfD leader Alice Weidel and Sahra Wagenknecht, founder of the newly-formed Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance, were chauffeured as Barbies by Putin with bloody hands in a pink convertible.

North Rhine-Westphalian Prime Minister Hendrik Wüst of the CDU walked along the Cologne train. He said that Carnival is diversity in action and that, incidentally, it is beneficial to have “a little fun” from time to time.

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POLITICS

Scholz urges Germans to ‘go vote’ against attacks on politicians

Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Thursday urged voters to cast their ballots in defence of democracy, as postal voting for June's EU elections began amid a spat of attacks against politicians in Germany.

Scholz urges Germans to 'go vote' against attacks on politicians

“Attacks on our democracy concern us all,” Scholz said in a video podcast Thursday.

“That’s why we can’t stand idly by when our public officials, campaigners or volunteers are brutally attacked. When campaign posters for the European elections are destroyed.

“The answer that each of us can give is very simple — go vote,” he said.

Two politicians from Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD) have been assaulted in the past week.

Matthias Ecke, the head of the SPD’s European election list in the Saxony region, was set upon last Friday by a group of youths as he put up election posters in the eastern city of Dresden.

The four teenage attackers are thought to have links to the far-right group known as “Elblandrevolte”, according to German media.

Former Berlin mayor Franziska Giffey was at a library on Tuesday afternoon when a man came up from behind her and hit her on the head and neck with a bag.

The increased frequency of attacks has sparked calls for tougher action against those who target politicians.

In his podcast, Scholz also took aim at Germany’s far-right AfD party.

Without referring to the party by name, the chancellor hit out at those calling “for Germany to leave the European Union”.

“Our united Europe is too precious to be left to those who want to destroy it.”

The AfD, which wants to dismantle the EU in its current form, is among a crop of far-right parties across Europe expected to make gains at the June polls.

According to opinion polls, the anti-immigration party is set to win around 15 percent of the vote in Germany, tied in second place with the Greens after the conservative CDU-CSU alliance.

The AfD has been hit by several recent scandals in Germany, including allegations of suspicious links with Russia and China.

In the podcast, Scholz blasted those who “see (President Vladimir) Putin’s Russia or (President) Xi Jinping’s China as role models for Europe”.

“What self-destructive madness!,” he said.

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