Spanish newspaper El Pais on Sunday retracted a column that compared German Chancellor Angela Merkel to Adolf Hitler and apologized for its “inappropriate” content after sparking an indignant Internet outcry.
In the column, published on the paper’s Web site and in its Andalusia regional edition, economist Juan Torres Lopez of the University of Seville wrote that “Angela Merkel, like Hitler, has declared war on the rest of the continent, this time to guarantee [Germany] its vital economic space.”
“She punishes us to protect her large companies and banks and also to hide from her electorate the shameful model that has seen the poverty rate in her country rise to its highest level in 20 years, 25 percent of employees earn less than 9.15 euros [US$12] an hour and half the population represent ... a miserable 1 percent of all the nation’s wealth,” Lopez wrote.
After the column provoked shocked reactions online, the newspaper took it down from its Web site and apologized.
“El Pais has withdrawn the article ‘Germany against Europe’ ... because it contained statements that this newspaper considers inappropriate,” it said. “El Pais regrets that a supervisory error allowed the publication of this material. The opinions expressed by Torres Lopes are his alone.”
The article had set media commentators and German Twitter users aflutter.
“Bitter. Now El Pais has also published an editorial, in which Merkel is compared to Hitler,” wrote Robin Alexander, a journalist with German daily Die Welt, on Twitter.
“To put Merkel’s policies on a level with Hitler’s is as loco [crazy] as it gets,” Mathieu von Rohr, Paris bureau chief for German weekly Der Spiegel, wrote on Twitter. “Of course Merkel’s [and everybody’s] stance may be criticised. But to use Hitler is incendiary, stupid and irresponsible.”
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