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France and Germany in united critical stand over Trump refugee ban

Germany's newly appointed foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel made his first official trip to meet with his French counterpart Jean-Marc Ayrault in Paris on Saturday, when the two men said US president Donald Trump's four-month ban on refugees from entering his country 'can only worry us' and goes against western values.

La rédaction de Mediapart

This article is freely available.

France and Germany formed a united front Saturday in the face of President Donald Trump's halt in the US refugee programme, with the German foreign minister noting that loving thy neighbour forms part of America's Christian traditions, reports ABC News.

After meeting Saturday, the foreign ministers of both nations, Jean-Marc Ayrault and Germany's Sigmar Gabriel, said they want to meet with Rex Tillerson, Trump's nominee for secretary of state who is still awaiting confirmation.

Ayrault said Trump's order on Friday that bars all refugees from entering the United States for four months - and those from war-ravaged Syria indefinitely - "can only worry us."

"We have signed international obligations, so welcoming refugees fleeing war and oppression forms part of our duties," the French minister said.

"There are many other issues that worry us," he added. "That is why Sigmar and I also discussed what we are going to do. When our colleague, Tillerson, is officially appointed, we will both contact him."

Gabriel - on his first trip abroad since his appointment Friday - said offering refuge to the persecuted and those fleeing death are western values that Europe and the United States share.

"Love thy neighbour is part of this tradition, the act of helping others," he said.

Read more of this AP report published by ABC News.