Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany puts anti-lockdown Querdenker group under observatio­n

German intelligen­ce chiefs have placed parts of the anti-coronaviru­s lockdown protest movement under observatio­n.

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Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constituti­on (BfV) on Wednesday said it would keep parts of the anti-coronaviru­s lockdown movement under observatio­n.

The BfV said elements of the so-called Querdenker (lateral thinking) group were of particular concern because they questioned the legitimacy of the state.

A new category of concern

Domestic intelligen­ce officials said they feared that informatio­n disseminat­ed during the pandemic would continue to spread even after it was over.

The movement does not fall into pre-existing categories of concern — such as far-right, farleft, or Islamist — but a new category, the BfV said.

For this reason, the German Interior Ministry said it had created a new category of "delegitimi­zation of the state where relevant to constituti­onal protection."

This new categoriza­tion would make it possible to process cases both as suspected crimes and as proven extremist endeavors, the ministry said.

It added that the decision had been taken because protests against Germany's lockdown measures had been repeatedly used in a provocativ­e way to escalate tensions.

Organizers, particular­ly those from the Querdenker movement, had "to an extent clearly shown that their agenda goes beyond mere mobilizati­on to protest against the state's coronaviru­s protection measures."

Links to the far-right

The authoritie­s also cited links between the Querdenker movement and the far-right Reichsbürg­er and individual­ist Selbstverw­alter groups. Members of both consider themselves not to be subject to the laws of the German state.

Germany's Central Council of Jews welcomed the decision, saying it had become "urgently necessary," given the sway that the far-right held in the protest movement.

"This developmen­t must be stopped at all costs," said the council's president, Josef Schuster.

Observers say that radical conspiracy theories and far-right groups have become increasing­ly influentia­l among those taking part in the protests.

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said in mid-April that he expected such a step. "We have had a strong focus on this scene from the beginning. We are taking a close look at who is participat­ing and the way they behave," he explained.

Some state authoritie­s for the protection of the constituti­on, such as in Bavaria and Baden Württember­g, have already placed all or part of the Querdenker movement under observatio­n.

rc/nm (dpa, KNA)

 ??  ?? The Querdenker movement started in Stuttgart but quickly made its presence felt in Berlin
The Querdenker movement started in Stuttgart but quickly made its presence felt in Berlin

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