Berliner Boersenzeitung - Young feminist, Iran-born old hand to lead German Greens

EUR -
AED 3.834139
AFN 71.572988
ALL 97.861015
AMD 407.407802
ANG 1.890032
AOA 953.572004
ARS 1048.014506
AUD 1.606059
AWG 1.881583
AZN 1.767523
BAM 1.949598
BBD 2.117364
BDT 125.321311
BGN 1.94742
BHD 0.393349
BIF 3097.804198
BMD 1.043874
BND 1.409244
BOB 7.246017
BRL 6.069215
BSD 1.048664
BTN 88.603321
BWP 14.316796
BYN 3.431982
BYR 20459.932097
BZD 2.113875
CAD 1.459827
CDF 2995.918625
CHF 0.925984
CLF 0.036838
CLP 1016.461806
CNY 7.56652
CNH 7.577487
COP 4581.824335
CRC 533.104017
CUC 1.043874
CUP 27.662663
CVE 109.916372
CZK 25.397718
DJF 186.745899
DKK 7.458762
DOP 63.188975
DZD 139.449742
EGP 51.913738
ERN 15.658111
ETB 130.685822
FJD 2.372518
FKP 0.823948
GBP 0.832145
GEL 2.844532
GGP 0.823948
GHS 16.674114
GIP 0.823948
GMD 74.114395
GNF 9039.329457
GTQ 8.095324
GYD 219.404104
HKD 8.125208
HNL 26.501072
HRK 7.446224
HTG 137.684617
HUF 411.097473
IDR 16603.234897
ILS 3.880534
IMP 0.823948
INR 88.181211
IQD 1373.849067
IRR 43952.318305
ISK 146.100465
JEP 0.823948
JMD 166.547337
JOD 0.740209
JPY 161.296814
KES 135.233639
KGS 90.29718
KHR 4229.625181
KMF 490.255503
KPW 939.486282
KRW 1465.781897
KWD 0.321211
KYD 0.873932
KZT 520.062978
LAK 22970.921797
LBP 93913.728945
LKR 305.119313
LRD 189.292331
LSL 18.975714
LTL 3.082289
LVL 0.631429
LYD 5.122703
MAD 10.488134
MDL 19.096248
MGA 4910.49567
MKD 61.339847
MMK 3390.462314
MNT 3547.08409
MOP 8.407474
MRU 41.706716
MUR 48.905479
MVR 16.127605
MWK 1818.458425
MXN 21.34712
MYR 4.663509
MZN 66.702495
NAD 18.975804
NGN 1765.27462
NIO 38.382986
NOK 11.601753
NPR 141.765035
NZD 1.786674
OMR 0.401877
PAB 1.048664
PEN 3.983427
PGK 4.22161
PHP 61.500891
PKR 291.489954
PLN 4.342798
PYG 8230.815018
QAR 3.823373
RON 4.976881
RSD 117.020934
RUB 108.145859
RWF 1440.950364
SAR 3.918961
SBD 8.736725
SCR 14.217433
SDG 627.892146
SEK 11.586344
SGD 1.405764
SHP 0.823948
SLE 23.575936
SLL 21889.522603
SOS 599.319201
SRD 36.958331
STD 21606.086019
SVC 9.17594
SYP 2622.764811
SZL 18.98406
THB 36.124827
TJS 11.168729
TMT 3.663998
TND 3.317677
TOP 2.444853
TRY 36.077745
TTD 7.118456
TWD 34.011518
TZS 2772.382363
UAH 43.296397
UGX 3874.710366
USD 1.043874
UYU 44.688687
UZS 13419.001279
VES 48.29914
VND 26540.498651
VUV 123.930829
WST 2.914069
XAF 653.892409
XAG 0.033343
XAU 0.000387
XCD 2.821122
XDR 0.799974
XOF 653.876799
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.868195
ZAR 18.86615
ZMK 9396.117559
ZMW 28.918002
ZWL 336.12703
  • RBGPF

    59.6900

    59.69

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.1200

    24.64

    +0.49%

  • RELX

    0.6500

    45.76

    +1.42%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    33.7

    +1.04%

  • BP

    0.4400

    29.52

    +1.49%

  • NGG

    -0.1700

    63.1

    -0.27%

  • CMSD

    0.1850

    24.445

    +0.76%

  • SCS

    -0.0300

    13.04

    -0.23%

  • RIO

    0.1800

    62.57

    +0.29%

  • BTI

    -0.1000

    36.98

    -0.27%

  • BCC

    2.9500

    140.36

    +2.1%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.23

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    6.79

    +2.65%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    26.68

    -1.2%

  • VOD

    -0.1000

    8.84

    -1.13%

  • AZN

    1.0600

    64.26

    +1.65%

Young feminist, Iran-born old hand to lead German Greens
Young feminist, Iran-born old hand to lead German Greens

Young feminist, Iran-born old hand to lead German Greens

Germany's Green party elected fresh leadership Saturday just a month after joining its first national government in 16 years, crowning a duo mixing new blood with outspoken policy experience.

Text size:

Feminist Ricarda Lang, 28, and Iranian-born foreign policy expert Omid Nouripour, 46, are taking the reins of the ecologist party as it attempts to keep supporters onside while maintaining a tricky coalition in Berlin.

The Greens and their chancellor candidate Annalena Baerbock scored their highest ever result in last September's general election with 14.8 percent of the vote.

But they fell short of even bigger expectations that they could name Angela Merkel's successor.

The party wound up joining Germany's first three-way national coalition, under Chancellor Olaf Scholz of the Social Democrats and alongside the pro-business Free Democrats.

Baerbock, now foreign minister, and her Greens co-leader Robert Habeck, the new vice chancellor, have stepped aside as chiefs of the party, whose flagship issue is fighting climate change.

- 'Fairness' -

Lang has become a rising star in German politics since being elected as a lawmaker last year and is now one of the youngest party leaders in post-war history.

Speaking just after her election, she promised to link protecting the environment to social progress.

The climate crisis "is particularly hitting those who have the least", she said.

Hailing from a small town in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany's only Greens-led state, Lang joined the party at 18 and became its deputy leader in November 2019 as well as its spokeswoman on women's affairs.

Before entering politics, the daughter of a single mother broke off her law studies to become a social worker in a home for abused women.

Coming to see government as the place to exact systemic change, she took over the leadership of the Greens' youth group from 2017 to 2019.

"I believe in fairness," she told local media, "so that people like my mother can have it easier in the future."

The Greens traditionally strive for gender balance in the leadership, and choose a pragmatist and an idealist, in this case Lang, at the top.

As an outspoken, openly bisexual woman in the public eye, Lang has faced a deluge of hate speech online, the most egregious of which she has fought with criminal complaints.

She has pledged to keep the party's often unruly ranks loyal "by making the Green profile apparent and ever stronger" even as it forges the compromises necessary to keep the coalition in Berlin together.

- 'Organic kebabs' -

Omid Nouripour, who was born in Tehran in 1975, has made his name chiefly on foreign policy in debates in the Bundestag, where he has served as an MP for over 15 years.

Particularly after its relative success of last year's election, he has said he wants to keep the party firmly in the mainstream while tending to its activist roots.

"We will become the leading force of the centre-left in Germany," he has pledged.

That includes keeping its eyes on the top prize -- the chancellery -- in the 2025 election, he said Saturday.

And that can only work, he argues, "if we think beyond the day-to-day of governing" with the Social Democrats and the FDP.

Nouripour has strived to sharpen the Green profile on human rights, calling most recently for a diplomatic boycott of the Winter Olympics in Beijing.

He strongly criticised Merkel while still in office for speaking directly to Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko by telephone, calling it a "disastrous signal".

Nouripour moved with his family as refugees from Iran to Germany in 1988 and started school in Frankfurt as a teenager.

After breaking off his studies in philosophy and law, Nouripour stood for parliament, winning the seat of Joschka Fischer when the Greens grandee left politics in 2006.

The avid football supporter and observant Muslim has won fans for his playful approach to multiculturalism, not least in a 2009 campaign video rapping about more renewable energy and "organic kofta kebabs for everyone".

(G.Gruner--BBZ)