The Hamilton Spectator

Man killed in German rival protest

-

CHEMNITZ, GERMANY — Hundreds of police officers worked to keep right-wing and left-wing demonstrat­ors apart Monday night in a city in eastern Germany where an Iraqi and a Syrian citizen were arrested in the killing of a German man.

About 1,000 left-wing protesters yelled slogans like “Nazis out” and “There’s no right to Nazi propaganda,” at a larger group of right-wing demonstrat­ors that retorted with “We are louder, we are more” and “Lying press.”

Officers in riot gear pushed people back as they tried to get at those on the other side.

The demonstrat­ors from the right hurled bottles and firecracke­rs at the rival camp before starting off on a march. No arrests or injuries were immediatel­y reported. Both groups took to the streets of Chemnitz after a 35-year-old German man was injured during a clash after a street festival and died early Sunday.

Prosecutor Christine Muecke told reporters Monday the slaying stemmed from a verbal confrontat­ion that escalated.

Two men were taken into custody — a 22-year-old Syrian citizen and a 21-year-old Iraqi citizen— and both were held on suspicion of manslaught­er, Muecke said.

She refused to provide more details about the suspects or the victim.

Hundreds of people also took part in spontaneou­s protests late Sunday in Chemnitz, a city where almost a quarter of the voters supported the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party last year. Videos posted on social media appeared to show far-right protesters threatenin­g and chasing passersby.

Of the estimated 800 people who took part in the first round of protests, about 50 were involved in violence and attacked police officers with bottles and stones, Chemnitz Police Chief Sonja Penzel said.

A Syrian teenager and an Afghan teenager were attacked in separate incidents but were not seriously hurt and a 30-year-old Bulgarian was also threatened, she said.

Penzel said police are still evaluating video footage and called for any witnesses to the violence to come forward.

Ahead of the Monday night protests, authoritie­s vowed not to let the situation get out of hand. City police had water cannons on hand. Earlier in the day, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokespers­on, Steffen Seibert, strongly condemned Sunday’s violence.

“What was seen yesterday in parts of Chemnitz and what was recorded on video has no place in our country,” Seibert told reporters in Berlin.

“People ganging up, chasing people who look different from them or who come from elsewhere ... is something we won’t tolerate,” he said.

“This has no place in our cities, and I can say for the German government that we condemn this in the sharpest possible manner.”

 ?? JENS MEYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters light fireworks during a far-right demonstrat­ion in Chemnitz, Germany, after a man has died and two others were injured in an altercatio­n.
JENS MEYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters light fireworks during a far-right demonstrat­ion in Chemnitz, Germany, after a man has died and two others were injured in an altercatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada