These two clips from German TV feature news reports from disparate sources that highlight an agonizing problem for the German multicultural Left: How to discuss the incidence of sexual attacks by “refugees” — which has grown too large to be completely ignored — without aiding the cause of PEGIDA, AfD, and other “extreme right” movements in Germany.

Watching these videos makes you wonder just how many culture-enriching rapes and molestations go completely unreported.

The common theme of the accounts given by the women interviewed in these reports is that it’s more important not to give any oxygen to the right wing than it is to prevent rapes and other forms of sexual violence.

The first interview is with Selin Gören, a Turkish-German left-wing activist who encountered a group of migrant rapists, and felt compelled to lie about it to the police.

Many thanks to Nash Montana for translating these clips, and to Vlad Tepes for the subtitling:

For more on Selin Gören’s mendacity in service of Multiculturalism, see this article in The Daily Mail.

The second video describes the dilemma faced by two young ladies who were groped by culture-enrichers at a rock concert. They’re dedicated Multiculturalists who have served the cause in the past, so how could this happen to them?

The TV presenter in this clip discusses the “delicate” problem of how to discuss the problem of sexual violence by migrants without providing fodder for the right wing:

Transcript video 1:

Transcript video 2:

0:00 Sometimes three words are enough to create an image in front of our eyes.

0:04 These three words are ‘Silvester night in Cologne’.

0:08 The image: Women who are sexually harassed by southern-looking men.

0:14 This image has shifted things quite a bit in many heads and hearts,

0:18 suddenly good and evil, right and left,

0:21 cannot be categorized so easily anymore.

0:24 When those who receive protection here, the presumed ‘good ones’,

0:27 become the attackers, what then?

0:30 This is a question that preoccupies two young women from Bremen,

0:33 who a very short time ago experienced something similar to what happened in Cologne.

0:36 Swantje Hirsch on a moral dilemma:

0:40 What Lea and Malina experienced has deeply affected them.

0:43 They don’t want to show their faces,

0:46 because the suspected attackers are still at large.

0:49 They say that they were sexually harassed multiple times, apparently by refugees.

0:53 For them the incidents are a double shock,

0:56 because they are engaged in anti-racism activities,

0:59 and are also active in the leftist scene.

1:02 To us this has somehow shocked us after all, because we were always

1:05 the people who would say, ‘Don’t think like that’,

1:08 and ‘No, these are clichés’, but once one experiences it on one’s own body,

1:11 that is just wholly different then.

1:14 Actually, I don’t even really want to believe it,

1:17 that… these people would possibly squander their chances like that,

1:22 and treat someone with such disrespect.

1:25 Lea is 18 years old. She just graduated,

1:28 and is starting a year of social studies in a few weeks. Malina is 17, and on summer vacation.

1:33 Here on the Weser where we meet them, tents were up just a few days ago.

1:38 It was the festival ‘Breminale’: free concerts, many people, great atmosphere.

1:44 Lea and Malina were dancing at a concert by the electro punk band ‘Alltag’.

1:48 But suddenly the concert became a nightmare for them and others, they say.

1:54 I was — my breast was pinched hard and I was groped between my legs,

1:58 and it wasn’t just a quick touch, I was pinched really hard.

2:03 Lea called the police, who would later apprehend the presumed offenders.

2:08 It was a group of young Afghans around 18 years old.

2:11 The girls filed charges, which is different from what happened a few weeks ago.

2:15 Back then they also were sexually harassed and they didn’t file charges.

2:20 They tell us that some of them were the same attackers.

2:23 These incidents now have changed their perceptions.

2:27 In my opinion this should not be a taboo topic;

2:30 this has to be talked about, just like Germans who commit sexual offenses,

2:34 but one has to be careful not to provide justifications

2:37 for right-wingers with their slogans.

2:41 How does one deal with this delicate topic?

2:44 Despite the incidents in Cologne, is it difficult to talk about

2:47 sexual harassment by refugees? When the rave punk band heard

2:50 about the sexual attacks, they interrupted their concert spontaneously,

2:54 with this announcement: I just got word here that

2:58 apparently there are some idiots walking around

3:01 groping women. You pissers piss off and leave our concert!

3:07 We meet with the band a few days later.

3:10 For them too, the sexual attacks came as a shock.

3:13 They thought about security concepts, and want to bring

3:16 contact persons to concerts from now on for women to talk to.

3:20 But what is the right way to deal with these incidents?

3:23 For the band this is not an easy question.

3:26 This of course leads to asking ourselves how we deal with this,

3:30 and there’s this discord that of course we want to denounce these incidents,

3:34 but we don’t want to get associated with these people

3:38 who because of such cases want to enact stronger asylum laws and stuff.

3:43 We ask at police headquarters in all large cities:

3:46 Are they aware of the problem of sexual harassment by groups?

3:49 What background do the offenders have?

3:52 Many police headquarters call us right back,

3:55 but their statements remain vague.

3:58 They tell us that they are aware of the problem, but they don’t have

4:01 any current statistics, and so it can’t be determined if

4:04 more or fewer incidents are occurring now.

4:07 This exacerbates the discussion about the phenomena.

4:10 We meet with the director of the Bremen sexual offense division, Harald Lührs,

4:15 He is also handling the cases of Lea and Malina.

4:18 This is a new problem that the police have to deal with,

4:22 but in the end this is a societal/political topic,

4:25 which certainly needs to be scientifically scrutinized as well,

4:29 because in the end the result should be successful integration.

4:33 Susanne Schröter heads the research center for global Islam

4:36 at the University of Frankfurt.

4:39 The ethnologist is very familiar with the fact that young men

4:42 in groups specifically target women in Arab and other Muslim countries.

4:46 She is not surprised at all that these incidents now are taking place in Germany.

4:49 These young men are feeling great frustration.

4:52 The frustration is that they were made false promises

4:55 by the coyotes, that here the circumstances would be completely different,

5:00 now they sit in these refugee homes,

5:03 they’re bored to death. We meet with Ahmad Mansour. The psychologist has Arab roots,

5:08 and he is an expert on Islamism.

5:11 He sees a connection between the incidents and the patriarchal structures

5:14 that dominate in many of the countries of origin.

5:17 Where worth especially of men is controlled,

5:20 and the sexes are strictly separated.

5:24 These are not isolated incidents. These are men who come from particular cultures,

5:28 from particular upbringings, which are very patriarchal,

5:33 which include certain religious understandings that promote this,

5:37 and that has to be talked about.

5:40 What do the young Afghans themselves have to say to the accusations

5:43 of sexually harassing the young girls?

5:46 We find concert recording in which one of the presumed offenders

5:49 is standing directly behind one of the girls. We are searching for him,

5:52 and we find out that he lives in this refugee home.

5:55 We manage to talk to him; he denies the accusations.

5:59 I told the police I want to see those girls who would claim such a thing.

6:04 We cannot talk about any further about his view of women;

6:07 one of the refugee home employees interrupts the interview.

6:11 I am sorry we have to immediately stop this.

6:14 No this is not allowed, come with me. — How old is he? — This is not allowed.

6:17 This is not allowed — Of course this is allowed! — No, this is not allowed, I’m telling you.

6:21 When it is about sexual harassment and refugees,

6:24 it very quickly becomes problematic, but the experts we asked

6:27 had a very clear attitude:

6:30 One just has to — for once — open one’s eyes

6:33 to the fact that we have a problem there, because if we don’t do that,

6:37 then a) the AfD and the right-wing populists are the only ones

6:41 who address this, and this worries a lot of people,

6:47 and b) we won’t have any possibility of changing this.

6:51 From politicians, I expect that the slogan “We can do that”

6:54 will be followed up with content.

6:57 And that would mean that we need comprehensive concepts

7:00 in order to convey values to these people,

7:03 in order to win these people over into our society.

7:08 Exactly that is important: We can only win over refugees

7:12 if we see with open eyes, check where we need to give more help,

7:16 and where we have to show more toughness.

7:19 By the way, since the incidents in Bremen there are now

7:23 24 investigative proceedings for presumed sexual harassment.