In the early 1990s after
German reunification, foreigners and especially
asylum seekers were very controversial in Germany. The
CDU party and the tabloid newspaper
Bild Zeitung were the main forces calling for limiting their numbers. In September 1991, violent disturbances in
Hoyerswerda forced the evacuation of an asylum seeker's hostel. During the three-day
riot of Rostock-Lichtenhagen in August 1992, several thousand people surrounded a high-rise building and watched approvingly while militants threw
Molotov cocktails. The Vietnamese inhabitants barely managed to survive by fleeing to the roof. In November 1992,
an arson in
Mölln perpetrated by
right-wing youth killed three Turks. In December 1992, large demonstrations protesting against
xenophobia ("Ausländerhass") took place all over Germany, with over 700,000 participants. Several
Neo-Nazi groups were outlawed by the end of 1992. On 26 May 1993, three days before the attack, the
German Bundestag had resolved to change the German constitution (the
Grundgesetz) to limit the numbers of asylum seekers. Previously, the constitution had granted every political refugee in the world a direct right to refugee status in Germany. The Solingen attack, with five people killed, was the most severe case of anti-foreigner violence in Germany at that time. One week later, an arson attack on a house in
Frankfurt am Main, with 34 foreigners inside, was detected early and there were no deaths. A case of arson in an asylum seeker's hostel in
Lübeck in 1996 in which 10 people died was never solved. a total of 135 foreigners have died in Germany as a result of similar
xenophobic violence. ==Events==