The New Zealand Herald

Time to ‘take a stand’

Germans told to ‘get up off the sofa’ and ‘get louder’ to far-right

- Justin Huggler

The German Foreign Minister called on the country’s “silent majority” to “get up off the sofa” and take a stand against the far-right in the wake of neo-Nazi riots.

“The vast majority of Germans are cosmopolit­an and tolerant,” Heiko Maas told Bild am Sonntag.

“If decent people remain silent, the racists are much louder. We have to show the world that we democrats are the majority and the racists are a minority. The silent majority must finally get louder.”

Maas’s comments come after violent protests over the fatal stabbing of a man by migrants in the east German city of Chemnitz last week, in which neo-Nazis openly made Hitler salutes and abused foreigners.

“When it comes to xenophobia, the far-right and racism, Germany is quite rightly viewed through especially critical eyes,” the Foreign Minister said.

“If the Hitler salute is displayed on our streets today, it is shameful for our country. Politician­s must do our part, but it is a challenge for the whole of society: we have to take a stand against the far-Right.”

Maas said Germans had to speak up for basic rights. “My generation has been given freedom, the rule of law and democracy. We didn’t have to fight for it, and sometimes we take it for granted. We have to get up off the sofa and open our mouths.”

Protests at Chemnitz lasting several days came after the death of a German-Cuban man in a suspected stabbing by two migrants from Iraq and Syria.

More protests passed off largely peacefully on Sunday amid a heavy police presence. Eighteen people suffered injuries in scuffles, but none was seriously hurt.

More than 11,000 people took part in the rival rallies, according to police. Protesters poured into Chemnitz from across Germany.

The nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party (AfD), which has seen its support rise in the polls since the protests began, held a silent march through the city led by Bjo¨ rn Ho¨ cke, one of its most controvers­ial politician­s, who has previously called for a “180-degree turn” in German attitudes to World War II. The AfD march joined a demonstrat­ion by the antiMuslim Pegida movement. Left-wing “Antifa” protesters held a rival rally, and police were deployed to keep them apart.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Bjo¨ rn Ho¨ cke of the nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party, second from right, at a march in Chemnitz.
Photo / AP Bjo¨ rn Ho¨ cke of the nationalis­t Alternativ­e for Germany party, second from right, at a march in Chemnitz.

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