More than 600 criminal complaints have been filed in Germany following a New Year’s Eve sexual assault spree that left the nation reeling.
In Cologne, women reported mass sexual assaults and muggings — and in a few instances of rape — in a crowd of around 1000 revelers outside the central train station on the holiday night.
The attacks were initially downplayed by Cologne’s police force, and the apparent involvement of newly arrived asylum-seekers denied, a decision that has cost the city’s police chief his post.
And while it has since emerged that these attacks were not limited to Cologne (reports now say that other German cities, and even foreign cities such as Zurich and Helinski were also targeted), this western German city has become the focus of a complicated debate with anger on all sides.
So what has actually happened?
Among a crowd of over 1000 people on New Year’s Eve, hundreds of women were sexually assaulted, mugged and in some instances raped.
Newsagent Nasan Nandinian, 63, told The Guardian that women were coming into his shop, seeking refuge from the crowd.
“They came from the station, and said it was absolutely horrible – crowds so deep you could hardly move, and men who were intensely aggressive towards them. They were shaking. Some were crying. I let them stay here and use the toilet,” he said.