Times Colonist

Police stop anti-immigrant march

Far-right activists rally after killing of German citizen

- ADAM PEMBLE and KIRSTEN GRIESHABER

CHEMNITZ, Germany — Police in eastern Germany halted an antiimmigr­ation protest march that emboldened far-right activists started Saturday in the hope it would launch a nationwide movement capable of challengin­g the political establishm­ent.

Three nationalis­t groups held separate daytime rallies in the city of Chemnitz over the Aug. 26 killing of a German citizen, allegedly by migrants from Syria and Iraq. The two largest groups also organized a joint nighttime march, thinking a broader force might emerge from the display of unity and take hold.

If the number of people who attended is any gauge, the envisioned far-right movement was in the earliest of embryonic stages. It drew about 4,500 participan­ts, Saxony state police reported, before citing security concerns as the reason for ending the event early.

The demonstrat­ors yelled and whistled angrily as officers broke up the protest.

The march was stopped several times along the way as counterpro­testers blocked the route and the police officers deployed to keep them and the marchers apart flooded into the street. The counter-protesters numbered about 4,000, the state police said.

The opposing camps clashed in Chemnitz on Monday, the day after the fatal stabbing of the 35-year-old German citizen and the arrests of the migrants on suspicion of manslaught­er. Scenes of vigilantes chasing foreigners in the city’s streets have shocked people in others parts of Germany since then.

Police, at times, were unable to control the earlier protests and clashes.

Leaders of the two groups that combined forces on Saturday night cultivated a different image for the “mourning march,” wearing dark suits and carrying white roses.

However, the mood at the event bringing together previously isolated clusters of nationalis­ts — from lawmakers to Hitler-saluting skinheads — darkened as the sun set. People from both ends of the political spectrum could be seen drinking beer and shouting slurs at police.

The tension in the air reflected the polarizati­on over Germany’s ongoing effort to come to terms with an influx of more than one million refugees and migrants seeking jobs since 2015.

The right blames Chancellor Angela Merkel’s decision to allow in hundreds of thousands of asylum-seekers from war-torn countries like Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n for many problems. Some far-right supporters argued before the killing in Chemnitz that migrants are responsibl­e for an increase in serious crimes, especially attacks on women.

The anti-migrant sentiment has been particular­ly strong in Saxony state, traditiona­l stronghold­s of groups that sought to inspire a nationwide movement on Saturday night: the Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamizati­on of the West, or PEGIDA, and the farright Alternativ­e for Germany party, which has won seats in federal and state parliament­s with an anti-Muslim platform.

While the share of foreigners residing in Saxony remains below Germany’s national average and displays of Nazi symbols are outlawed across the country, far-right sympathize­rs mobilized with exceptiona­l speed on the night of the Chemnitz slaying and the days after.

German Justice Minister Katarina Barley said Saturday that authoritie­s should investigat­e the role of networks from the radical far right in spearheadi­ng the week’s protests.

“We do not tolerate that rightwing extremists infiltrate our society,” Barley told weekly newspaper Bild am Sonntag. “It’s about finding out who’s behind the mobilizati­on of far-right criminals.”

Local police appeared to have been caught unprepared when the slaying triggered the protests, which attracted crowds openly engaging in Nazi veneration and devolved into violence.

The protests were sparked by a fatal stabbing of a 35-year-old German man, Daniel Hillig. Two asylum-seekers, a 22-year-old Iraqi and a 23-year-old Syrian, have been arrested on suspicion of manslaught­er.

German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, known for his anti-migrant stance, said Saturday that he understood why “the people in Chemnitz and elsewhere are upset about the brutal killing,” but added “there’s no excuse for violence,” Funke Media Group reported.

“We need a strong state and we have to do everything politicall­y to overcome the polarizati­on and division of our society,” Seehofer stressed.

While anti-migrant protests took place in Germany before, especially during the early 1990s, a strong and vocal opposition usually was there to provide a counterfor­ce.

Artists organized concerts to raise awareness, and ordinary citizens lined up in kilometres­long human chains to protest violence against newcomers.

Chemnitz, a city known for its hardened neo-Nazi scene, at first attracted a comparativ­ely weak response to the recent antimigran­t activity. About 70 leftleanin­g and pro-migrant groups organized the “Heart not Hatred” rally that got in the way of Saturday’s far-right march.

“I’ve a lot of experience with far-right protests in Chemnitz,” Tim Detzner, a member of the Left Party in Chemnitz, said, noting that the street riots last week “reached a level of aggression, brutality and willingnes­s to use violence that we haven’t known before.”

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors, holding photos of people they claim have been killed by migrants, march in Chemnitz, eastern Germany, on Saturday.
Demonstrat­ors, holding photos of people they claim have been killed by migrants, march in Chemnitz, eastern Germany, on Saturday.

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