Debate Magazine

Germany is Insane: Nurse Evicted from Home of 16 Years to Make Way for “refugees”

By Eowyn @DrEowyn

RT reports, Sept. 26, 2015, that German nurse Bettina Halbey, 51, is in shock after receiving a letter from her landlord and the local municpality of the small town of Nieheim, pop. 6,000, informing her that because building a new shelter for refugees is too expensive, she is being evicted from her flat of 16 years to make way for those refugees.

To add insult on injury, Halbey has helped asylum seekers in the past.

Bettina Halbey's flat

Halbey told the newspaper Die Welt, “I was completely shocked and I can’t even begin to find the words to describe how the city has treated me. I have had to go through a lot of difficulties recently, and then I get this notice. It was like a kick in the teeth.”

Halbey will have until May 2016 to find a new place to live, along with her dog and her cat. The three-story building, where she rented a 90 sq/m flat will now be turned into accommodation for refugees.

Nieheim mayor Rainer Vidal defended the decision to send the nurse packing, saying converting the building would be “the cheapest option. A new residential unit for 30 refugees in Nieheim would cost €30,000 ($33,600). This solution will cost me nothing.”

Rainer Vidal
Over half the population of Germany live in rented accommodation and the country has laws to defend the rights of tenants.

Ulrich Ropertz, spokesman of the German Tenants’ Federation, told the Telegraph, “Normally, only a private individual can terminate the terms of a contract for personal use. A municipality cannot move into a flat as a legal entity, so the process is legally highly questionable.”

Halbey, who brought up two sons as a single parent, became so incensed by the decision that she wrote about her plight on Facebook. The social media reaction was instant. Over 200,000 people have shared her story, which was also picked up by the German media.

The nurse says that she is not against Germany taking in refugees and she says she got on well with asylum seekers who had earlier become her neighbors, “We take care of each other. Helping people, this is of the utmost importance to me.” [That makes Bettina Halbey a most “useful idiot“. – Ed.]

Mayor Vidal slammed Halbey for going public with her complaints and added that she had been given ample time to find new accommodation: “I find it very regrettable that the tenant has sought to go public with her issues. We have given her a generous period of notice, up until May of next year. We are also willing to help her find a new place to live. There have been several opportunities, but each one has failed because no one wants to offer her a flat because of her dog.”

On Sept. 24, the German government agreed to allocate a further €2 billion ($2.24 billion) for refugee housing, with €500 million ($560 million) to be spent on the construction of new accommodation centers. Local authorities have also implemented their own strategies, such as Hamburg’s plans to turn empty commercial properties into shelters, while empty apartments could serve the same purpose in Berlin.

Germany could receive between 800,000 and one million refugees this year, according to the UN, with an estimated 8,000 people arriving in Europe every day.

Meanwhile, German intelligence says ISIS is recruiting from among the “refugees” and “migrants.” 

H/t FOTM’s Glenn47

~Éowyn


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