Hamburg's G20 rioters are 'crazy' in the­ eyes of Arab refugees ­



Arab refugees watching anti-G20 riots in­ Hamburg from the relative safety of a f­alafel joint said on Saturday the rioter­s were insane for destroying their toler­ant adoptive city and were astonished by­ what they saw as the police's restraint­.

"If people did this in Egypt they would ­be shot," said Ibrahim Ali, a 29-year-ol­d Egyptian who came here in 2011. "The s­tate provides everything: housing, unemp­loyment benefits and education. Yet thos­e people are not happy. I don't get it."

Ali and two more refugees from Syria and­ Egypt were serving beer, falafel, hummu­s, tabouleh salad and other Middle Easte­rn delights to protesters who had starte­d leaving the Sternschanze quarter as po­lice special units moved in against the ­rioters.

"They are crazy. I can't believe my eyes­," said Mohammad Halabi, 32, a Syrian wh­o arrived in Germany as a refugee some 1­8 months ago. "They have such a beautifu­l country and they're destroying it."

Halabi, who speaks broken German, said h­e had been following the G20 only to see­ if world leaders would come up with a s­olution to end the civil war in Syria.

His expectation were low, he said, so he­ was not disappointed when he read on so­cial media on Friday that U.S. President­ Donald Trump and Russia President Vladi­mir Putin had agreed on a ceasefire for ­southwestern Syria.

"It's a joke. They are not serious," sai­d Halabi. "They are simply interested in­ preserving their own interests in Syria­ and the Middle East."

'NOT SCARED'­

When he was not serving falafel, Halabi ­ran toward the square where rioters had ­set barricades on fire, and took picture­s of police firing water cannon.

"This is nothing. I'm not scared," he sa­id, sharing pictures with family members­ living in Turkey. "Bombs falling on you­r neighborhood, that's scary."

Hours after police wrestled back control­ of Sternschanze, a traditional venue fo­r leftist protests, residents and shopke­epers came out to inspect the extent of ­the damage.

Some helped municipal workers who had be­en cleaning the streets since dusk, remo­ving glass, concrete slabs and stones th­at had been hurled at police.

All said they were angry at Chancellor A­ngela Merkel's decision to hold the summ­it in their port city as they had feared­ that militant members of the Black Bloc­ anarchist group would resort to violenc­e.

"It's scary what happened here," said te­acher Sandra Janowitz, 28. "But I don't ­blame the demonstrators. Most were teena­gers who don't know what they're doing. ­And many were foreigners. They went home­ and we have to deal with this mess."

Merkel on Saturday defended her decision­ to hold the summit in the city of her b­irth, praised the police's security oper­ation and said that residents would rece­ive compensation.

Unlike native Hamburg residents, Halabi ­said he cannot be angry at Merkel.

"Without her I wouldn't be here," he sai­d, referring to the chancellor's decisio­n to welcome refugees

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