|     Germany:   Integration debate is racist 19th century talk, says Turkish scholar        Via The Local:    A leading   Turkish scholar has likened elements of the latest German debate on   integration to racist 19th century notions of "primitive" immigrants who   breed uncontrollably.        The new head of the centre for Turkish Studies and Integration Research at   Essen University, Haci Halil Uslucan, said the Sarrazin debate appeared to   have flushed out old ideas about race that did not belong in the 21st   century.        "Take the now-revived discussion of migrants' 'high fertility,'" he   said. "Debate about it is like the 19th century racist discussions about   'primitives' who could not control their drives," he told Wednesday's edition   of daily Der Tagesspiegel.        His remarks came as Justice Minister Sabine Leutheusser-Schnarrenberger   warned of a rising fear of Islam and the view that "Muslims and their   religion are regarded as threatening."        "It would be wrong to see it this way: here, the Western, enlightened and   liberal Europeans, there the fundamentalist migrants," she said on Wednesday   at the opening of the German Legal Congress.        Uslucan said that people from poorer rural areas typically had larger   families for social reasons, yet such clear-headed analysis was missing from   much of the debate in Germany.                     |   
 
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