Violence and Foreign Women in Europe, By Richard Miller (Londonistan)

A recent Infowars.com article (below) noted: "The constant refrain is that men in general are behind Germany's crime problem and that foreign origin is secondary. However, current data shows the opposite is true.

Last year, Syrian women had higher rates, per 100,000 people suspected of violence, than German men.

The data shows that for 100,000 German men, 272 were suspected of a violent offense. For Syrian women, this figure per 100,00 was 336. Clearly, Syrian women were more violent than German men.

However, they are not the only group. Afghan women are also more violent, with a rate of 359, even more violent than Syrian women.

Iraqi women have an incredible rate of 394, which is considerably more than German men.

Even Serbian women are more violent than German men, with a rate of 371.

Bulgarian women are at 359.

For German women, only 60 are suspected of a violent crime per 100,000.

All of this data makes the Left's generalized argument about the "violent male" questionable at best. Although, German police, in the name of the Left's precious mantra of gender equality, did somehow manage to confiscate knives from elderly German women at Christmas markets."

This raises the more general question about the crime rates of foreign women in Europe. I decided that this was worth researching, but I soon came to many dead ends. Nevertheless, for what it is worth, here is my report, since there is not much on internet sites about this topic:

Data on violence rates specifically for foreign women across Europe is sparse and inconsistent, as most crime statistics focus on broader categories like gender or nationality without isolating foreign women as a distinct group.

Crime statistics across Europe, particularly for violent offenses, are primarily collected by national police forces and aggregated by Eurostat, the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE), and the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA). These sources do not typically break down violent crime perpetration by foreign women specifically, but they do provide insights into gender-based violence, victimhood, and general crime trends, which can offer context.

General Trends: Eurostat's 2024 crime statistics show a rise in violent crimes across the EU, with sexual violence offenses increasing by 5.5% in 2023 compared to 2022, and a 79.2% increase in sexual violence since 2013. However, these stats do not disaggregate perpetrators by both gender and foreign status.

Germany as a Case Study: The only specific data on foreign women as perpetrators comes from Germany's 2024 Police Criminal Statistics (PKS), as cited in our source, below. It claims higher violent crime rates for women from countries like Syria (336 per 100,000), Afghanistan (359), Iraq (394), Serbia (371), and Bulgaria (359) compared to German men (272) and German women (60). Without similar breakdowns from other EU countries, it's hard to generalise this trend across Europe.

Lack of EU-Wide Specificity: Most EU countries don't publish detailed suspect demographics combining gender and nationality. For example, the UK's 2024 crime data notes that 20% of reported crimes involve violence against women and girls, but it doesn't specify the nationality of female perpetrators. Similarly, France and Italy report high femicide rates (118 and 61 victims in 2022, respectively), but perpetrator data focuses on intimate partners, not foreign status.

2. Foreign Women as Victims

Victimisation Rates: Foreign women in Europe are often more vulnerable to violence than native women due to social, economic, and legal precarity. The 2024 EU Gender-Based Violence Survey (conducted 2020–2024 by Eurostat, FRA, and EIGE) found that 30% of women aged 18–74 in the EU have experienced physical or sexual violence in their lifetime, with migrant women potentially facing higher risks due to factors like poverty or lack of access to support services. However, exact figures for foreign women are not isolated.

Reporting Barriers: Only 13.9% of women who experience violence report it to the police, with migrant women even less likely to report due to distrust, language barriers, or fear of deportation. In Germany, studies note that non-German victims are less likely to report crimes, especially if the perpetrator is German, which may skew perceptions of crime rates.

Nordic Paradox: Countries like Denmark (32%), Finland (30%), and Sweden (28%) report high rates of intimate partner violence (IPV) against women, above the EU average of 22%. Migrant women in these countries may face elevated risks, but data on their perpetration of violence is absent.

3. Challenges in Comparing Data

Inconsistent Definitions: Crime definitions and reporting practices vary across EU countries, making comparisons difficult. For instance, what constitutes "violent crime" in Germany's PKS (e.g., assault, robbery) may differ from definitions in France or Sweden.

Underreporting: Sexual and domestic violence are heavily underreported, with only 1 in 8 women reporting incidents to police. This obscures the true scale of violence, whether perpetrated by or against foreign women.

Lack of Granular Data: Unlike Germany's PKS, most EU countries don't provide suspect data by both gender and nationality. Eurostat's crime database includes intentional homicides, sexual violence, and other offences but doesn't break down perpetrators by foreign status and gender.

4. Broader Context of Violence in Europe

Rising Violent Crime: In 2023, the EU recorded 3,930 intentional homicides (a 1.5% increase from 2022) and 243,715 sexual violence offences, including 91,370 rapes. These figures suggest a general uptick in violence, but the role of foreign women as perpetrators isn't explicitly addressed.

Cultural and Policy Factors: In countries with high gender equality (e.g., Nordic nations), higher reporting rates may reflect greater trust in institutions, not necessarily higher violence. Conversely, in Eastern Europe (e.g., Latvia, Belarus), higher femicide rates correlate with lower gender equality, but foreign women's involvement as perpetrators isn't documented.

Migration and Crime Narratives: Political rhetoric often links migration to crime, as seen in Germany, but criminologists argue this oversimplifies the issue. Factors like poverty, social exclusion, and past trauma may drive crime among migrants, regardless of gender.

There's insufficient EU-wide data to definitively assess the violence rates of foreign women compared to native populations across Europe. Germany's 2024 PKS data suggests that women from certain countries (e.g., Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq) have higher violent crime rates than German men, but this is an outlier in terms of specificity. Elsewhere, data focuses on women as victims, not perpetrators, with migrant women often facing heightened vulnerability. Variations in legal definitions, reporting practices, and data collection limit cross-country comparisons. To understand this issue fully, more countries would need to adopt Germany's approach to disaggregating suspect data by gender and nationality, but woke feminist ideologies will prevent this.

https://www.infowars.com/posts/foreign-women-more-violent-than-german-men

"The constant refrain is that men in general are behind Germany's crime problem and that foreign origin is secondary. However, current data shows the opposite is true.

Last year, Syrian women had higher rates, per 100,000 people suspected of violence, than German men.

The data shows that for 100,000 German men, 272 were suspected of a violent offense. For Syrian women, this figure per 100,00 was 336. Clearly, Syrian women were more violent than German men.

However, they are not the only group. Afghan women are also more violent, with a rate of 359, even more violent than Syrian women.

Iraqi women have an incredible rate of 394, which is considerably more than German men.

Even Serbian women are more violent than German men, with a rate of 371.

Bulgarian women are at 359.

For German women, only 60 are suspected of a violent crime per 100,000.

All of this data makes the left's generalized argument about the "violent male" questionable at best. Although, German police, in the name of the left's precious mantra of gender equality, did somehow manage to confiscate knives from elderly German women at Christmas markets.

There is no doubt that males are behind the violent crime surge overall, but as the data shows, this has a lot to do with only males from certain countries. These males are in the headlines every single day in Germany, including for a recent wave of knife crimes that have shocked the country.

If we compare Syrian men to German men, the figures are truly astounding. There are 2,608 violent suspects per 100,000 Syrian men. Again, German men are only at 272. That means Syrian men are approximately nine times more likely to commit a serious crime than German men.

Turkish men, with 904 suspects per 100,000 inhabitants, are more than three times as likely as German men to commit a violent crime.

Afghans have a rate of 2,409. Iraqis are at 2,479, Bulgarians at 1,353, and Serbians at 1,246.

However, the crown goes to Moroccan men, who have a rate of 3,388 suspects in the category of violent crime per 100,000.

This data was obtained from the Police Criminal Statistics (PKS) 2024 shows data for the so-called "suspect exposure number" (TVBZ) with regard to the age, gender and origin of suspects. This data describes how many suspects there were per 100,000 inhabitants of a certain group per crime, such as assault, based on criteria such as gender and foreign status, for specific years.

The data was released in response to a request from the federal government from AfD MP Martin Hess." 

 

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Saturday, 31 May 2025

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