The Borneo Post (Sabah)

German ‘Reichsbuer­ger' suspect on trial for police murder

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NUREMBERG, Germany: A 49-year-old German suspected of belonging to the shadowy farright ‘Reichsbuer­ger’ movement denied a charge of murder as he went on trial yesterday for shooting a policeman during an early-morning raid on his house.

Speaking through his lawyer, Wolfgang Plan told the court in the Bavarian city of Nuremberg that he never intended to kill anyone.

Plan also denied being affiliated with the ‘Reichsbuer­ger’ or ‘Citizens of the Reich’ movement, whose members include neoNazis, conspiracy theorists and gun enthusiast­s who reject the legitimacy of the modern German republic.

“He would not describe himself as such,” defence lawyer Susanne Koller said.

She said her client was woken from his sleep and thought he was under attack when his house was stormed in the “amateurish” raid in October 2016, and had no idea he was firing at police.

“This can’t possibly be considered an act of murder,” Koller told the court.

One policeman was critically injured and later died of his wounds, while three others were injured in the confrontat­ion in the town of Georgensgm­uend.

The raid was aimed at seizing Plan’s arsenal of about 30 weapons after his permits were rescinded following an assessment that he was psychologi­cally “unsound”.

Plan, a hunter who once ran a martial arts school, stands accused of murder, attempted murder and causing grieving bodily harm.

Despite rejecting the ‘Reichsbuer­ger’ label, Plan had apparently declared his own mini-state, with DPA news agency reporting he had drawn yellow lines around his property to demarcate the borders of “the government district of Wolfgang”.

“He had his own state with his own laws,” a neighbour was quoted as telling DPA.

Reichsbuer­ger followers generally believe in the continued existence of the pre-war German Reich and several groups have declared their own states.

They typically deny the legitimacy of police and other state institutio­ns and refuse to pay taxes.

Long dismissed as malcontent­s and oddballs, the Reichsbuer­ger are seen as a growing threat after a string of violent incidents.

Two months before the deadly shooting in Bavaria, a 41-yearold Reichsbuer­ger and one-time “Mister Germany” pageant winner opened fire on police carrying out an eviction order at his house in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt.

The gunman was seriously wounded and three officers suffered light injuries.

Police have since launched a crackdown on the movement, carrying out a series of raids against suspected Reichsbuer­ger, seizing arms and making several arrests.

In June, Germany’s national and regional interior ministries said anyone who identifies as a Reichsbuer­ger should be barred from possessing a weapon.

Security services believe some 12,600 people in Germany identify as Reichsbuer­ger, some 700 of whom are known far-right extremists. — AFP

 ??  ?? Plan (centre) arrives at his trial at the Nuremberg-Fuerth Court in Nuremberg. — AFP photo
Plan (centre) arrives at his trial at the Nuremberg-Fuerth Court in Nuremberg. — AFP photo

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