 Why someone like me, someone who never participated in elections, someone who comes from Croatia, running as a candidate precisely in Germany? This is a question everyone will pose. Well, the reasons are obvious. The first reason is that I happened to live in Germany for the first eight years of my life, since my father was a political immigrant from Yugoslavia. So I know very well what it means to be a foreigner, an Ausländer in Germany. The second reason is that due to the current economic crisis in ex-Yugoslavia, Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia, Macedonia and so on, some states are already members of the EU, some others are not, that because of this we have a big influx of migrants to Germany. So for example we have more than 300,000 migrants from Croatia who are living in Germany. Altogether we have more than one billion people from ex-Yugoslavia. And the question is whether these people are really represented. The same goes for all the Turks in Germany and for all other foreigners. And with the current statistics the migration question will become one of the most important questions, not just for Europe. According to the statistics of the World Bank in the next two or three decades we might have more than 100 million refugees coming to Europe. So what will Europe do if this happens? These are just one of the questions and one of the reasons why I am personally running in Germany to raise this question, to represent those people in Germany who are not represented, who are foreigners, who don't feel themselves as the ones who are part of the political debate and the decision-making process.