August 2, 2013 - 11:43 AMT
Former Chancellor wanted to halve number of Turks in Germany

Former Chancellor Helmut Kohl wanted to halve the number of Turks living in West Germany in the early 1980s, British official papers cited by a German magazine reveal.

He discussed the idea with then UK PM Margaret Thatcher at a meeting in Bonn in 1982, Spiegel Online reported, according to BBC News.

Kohl said that Turks "did not integrate well", minutes of the meeting said. He told Thatcher he wanted their numbers cut by half within four years.

Speigel Online said the minutes were marked "secret" but have now been released as the period of confidentiality has ended.

"Chancellor Kohl said... that it would be necessary over the next four years to reduce the number of Turks by 50% - but he could not say that publicly," notes from the meeting said, according to the Spiegel Online report.

"Germany had no problems with the Portuguese, the Italians, even the south-east Asians, because these communities integrated well," the notes read. "But the Turks came from a very distinctive culture and did not integrate well."

The author of the report was said to be Thatcher's then private secretary, AJ Coles.

Turkish migration to Germany stems from October 1961 when a labor recruitment agreement was signed between the two countries.

Many so-called "guest workers" also came from Italy, Greece, Portugal, Tunisia and the then Yugoslavia.

Kohl, who was chancellor until 1998 and a leader of the conservative Christian Democrats (CDU), often spoke out against immigration during his time in office. However, numbers of immigrants continued to rise steadily.