The Jerusalem Post

German police raid homes of suspected far-right extremists

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BERLIN (Reuters) – German police raided the homes of suspected members of a farright group in Berlin and in the states of Brandenbur­g and Thueringia on Sunday, searching for weapons, the chief federal prosecutor’s office said.

The homes of eight people suspected of founding a far-right terrorist group were searched in the raids, it said in a statement.

Investigat­ors, assisted in their searches by the anti-terrorism GSG 9 police unit, were looking for weapons held by the suspects, who they believe are ready to kill targeted people if necessary. They did not detain any suspects.

The investigat­ors believe the suspects are members of the Reichsbuer­ger (Citizens of the Reich) group, who do not recognize modern-day Germany as a legitimate state and insist the former, far-larger “Deutsche Reich” is still alive, despite Nazi Germany’s defeat in World War Two.

The domestic intelligen­ce service estimates that the Reichsbuer­ger have several thousand members.

One of them shot dead a police officer in Bavaria in October 2016, as a police team was about to enter his home to seize his hunting and sports guns, which the authoritie­s deemed he was not fit to hold as a member of the group.

Sunday’s raids were not linked to the incident in Muenster on Saturday, when a man drove a camper van into a group of people sitting outside a restaurant, killing two of them before shooting himself dead, the prosecutor’s office said.

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