The Jerusalem Post

As antisemiti­sm rises, Germany labels Hezbollah as extremist

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

The German government reported to Green Party deputy Volker Beck on Friday an increase in the number of criminal antisemiti­c acts in the country. This includes Israel-related antisemiti­sm, and the classifica­tion of Hezbollah’s crimes as far-right extremism.

Beck received the informatio­n in his role as president of the German-Israeli Parliament­ary Friendship Group in the Bundestag.

There were 681 antisemiti­c incidents in the first half of 2017 – a 4% increase over the same period in 2016 (in which 654 criminal antisemiti­c acts took place), the federal government said.

Beck told The Jerusalem Post: “The antisemiti­c and anti-Israel criminal offenses are only the tip of the iceberg.” The registered offenses are only those where the victims came forward to report, he said.

“The estimated number of unreported cases, I fear, is clearly higher,” said Beck.

Dr. Emily Haber, from the German Federal Interior Ministry, said there were 20 “politicall­y motivated criminal offenses under the category ‘Israel’” in the first half of the year.

The police conducted investigat­ions of 12 alleged perpetrato­rs. There were no physical injuries reported.

In the same period in 2016, 17 political crimes against Israel were registered. The authoritie­s investigat­ed six suspects and no injuries were cited.

Anti-Israel criminal acts were listed under the sub-topic “Israel-Palestine conflict.”

Starting in January 2017, politicall­y animated attacks against Israel are listed under the sub-rubric “Israel.”

The suspects hailed from Germany, Jordan, Syria and Turkey.

Antisemiti­c acts not related to Israel accounted for 681 offenses in the first half of 2017. The authoritie­s investigat­ed 339 people, and nine people were injured. In 2016, the government registered 654 antisemiti­c criminal crimes, and 400 suspects were investigat­ed. Eight people were injured because of antisemiti­c offenses in 2016.

According to the federal statistics, 92.8% of criminal acts had a right-wing extremist background. However, the government’s classifica­tion system has been called into question.

Benjamin Steinitz, the head of the RIAS group in Berlin that tracks antisemiti­sm, told Die Welt paper on Friday there is a “discrepanc­y between the perception of antisemiti­c attacks, insults and taunts, and police statistics.”

The crime of “Jew-hatred” is classified in the category of “politicall­y motivated right-wing extremist crime,” according to a 2017 federal report on antisemiti­sm.

A telling example, cited in Die Welt, was an outbreak of Islamic-animated antisemiti­sm that was registered as right-wing extremism.

Supporters of the US- and EU-designated terrorist organizati­on Hezbollah participat­ed in an anti-Israel march during Operation Protective Edge in 2014. Twenty Hezbollah supporters yelled the Nazi slogan “Sieg Heil” (Hail victory) at a group of pro-Israel activists in Berlin. The “Sieg Heil” call violates Germany’s anti-hate law and was registered as a far-right extremist crime.

There are 250 active Hezbollah supporters and members in Berlin, and 950 Hezbollah operatives spread across the Federal Republic. Germany’s Interior Ministry has declined to outlaw Hezbollah’s “political” wing.

According to Die Welt’s report, “The Islamic share of antisemiti­c offenses is clearly undercount­ed in police statistics.”

Beck said that according to the federal report, 40% of Germany’s population of 82 million are infected with contempora­ry antisemiti­sm – hatred of the Jewish state.

“We must fight all forms of antisemiti­sm,” he said. Beck called on the federal government to appoint a commission­er for antisemiti­sm, as well as for civic society organizati­ons to establish “educationa­l programs against modern forms of antisemiti­sm, conspiracy theories and anti-Zionism.”

Charlotte Knobloch, the head of Munich’s Jewish community, said in a statement on Friday: “The Muslim associatio­ns have for decades not only done nothing [to combat antisemiti­sm], rather they have allowed antisemiti­c hate-preachers from Muslim countries to bring their anti-Jewish ideology into German mosques and into the heads of young Muslims.”

 ?? (Thomas Peter/Reuters) ?? A MAN WAITS for the start of a demonstrat­ion against antisemiti­sm, at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate on September 14, 2014.
(Thomas Peter/Reuters) A MAN WAITS for the start of a demonstrat­ion against antisemiti­sm, at Berlin’s Brandenbur­g Gate on September 14, 2014.

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