Lagerfeld mulls renouncing German citizenship, blames Merkel for rise of 'neo-Nazis'
Hamburg-born fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld has said he may rescind his German citizenship, saying he "hates" Chancellor Angela Merkel for paving the way for the resurgence of neo-Nazism with her open-door migrant policy.
Lagerfeld, the long-time creative director of Chanel often referred to as the Emperor of fashion, took a new swipe at Merkel over her controversial migrant policy that enabled an influx of refugees into the country of a scale that has never been seen since the end of the World War Two.
"Did she really need to say it was necessary to welcome one million migrants at a time when France, which casts itself as the land of human rights, pledged to take in 30,000?," Lagerfeld, who has been living in Paris for decades, told French weekly Le Point on Thursday.
In the run-up to the September parliamentary election, which saw the right-wing anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany party [AfD] entering the Bundestag for the first time, Merkel said she stood by her decision to allow hundreds of thousands of refugees to come into Germany at the height of the European migrant crisis in 2015.
"I still think my decision was right," she said weeks before the crucial vote that resulted in the worst performance for her conservative CDU-CSU block since 1949.
Pinning the blame directly on Merkel for the AfD's resounding success, which saw them grabbing 92 seats in the German legislature, Lagerfeld argued that Merkel "with one sentence" boosted the party's profile "alienating two million voters and sending 100 of these neo-Nazis into parliament."
The designer, who has never hidden his resentment for AfD, indicated that he might give up his German passport if the situation doesn't change.
"If this keeps up, I'll abandon German citizenship. I do not want to be part of this neo-Nazi club," he said, adding that while he likes the French first couple, President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte, this doesn't mean he will seek French citizenship.
"I don't like nations, I'm cosmopolitan," Lagerfeld said.
Laying into Merkel personally, who was born to a Lutheran pastor in Hamburg and then moved into East Germany, Lagerfeld argued that her "pastor's daughter" background prevents her from accepting "the evil that Germany carried out after 1933."
"We must remember the past we have in Germany. I hate Mrs. Merkel for having forgotten it," he said.
Last November, Lagerfeld stirred up controversy when he said that Merkel had traded millions of Jewish Holocaust victims for their "worst enemies," mainly referring to Muslim migrants of Arab and North African origin that have flooded Germany.
"Merkel had already millions and millions (of immigrants) who are well integrated and who work and all is well... she had no need to take another million to improve her image as the wicked stepmother after the Greek crisis," the designer said at the time.