German president Horst Koehler resigns
Germany's president Horst Koehler says he is stepping down with immediate effect, in a surprise move after criticism of recent comments he made about the country's mission in Afghanistan.
"I am resigning my post as federal president with immediate effect," Koehler, 67, whose job is largely ceremonial, said on Monday in Berlin.
"It was an honour for me to serve Germany as president," a visibly emotional Koehler told reporters with his wife at his side.
He said he had already informed Chancellor Angela Merkel of his decision.
"I thank the many people in Germany who have put their trust in me and supported my work. I ask for you to understand my decision."
Koehler came under fire for saying that an export-reliant country like Germany occasionally needed to defend its economic interests by preventing regional instabilities like that in Afghanistan.
Such regional instabilities "certainly have a negative impact on us through trade, jobs and income", Koehler told German radio on May 22.
A former managing director of the International Monetary Fund, the popular Koehler was elected to the post of president in 2004 and re-elected in 2009.
Polls show that a majority of Germans are opposed to the mission in Afghanistan.
Koehler said his comments were "misunderstood" and that his remarks were not meant to refer to the mission in Afghanistan, where Germany has 4500 troops in a NATO-led force tackling a Taliban-led insurgency.
Berlin wants to begin bringing its soldiers home in 2011, an aim shared by Washington, but has not fixed a date for withdrawal.
Under the constitution, the president of Germany's upper house, the Bundesrat, currently Jens Boehrnsen from the opposition Social Democrats, takes over Koehler's duties provisionally.