The Pak Banker

German spies monitor anti-lockdown activists

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Germany's domestic spy agency is monitoring individual­s who have joined anti-lockdown protests to decide if their rejection of government curbs amounts to subversion and incitement to violence.

The surveillan­ce includes some members of the "Querdenker" or "Lateral Thinkers" movement, which has been organising increasing­ly violent protests against coronaviru­s lockdowns and includes conspiracy theorists and suspected far-right extremists, a spokeswoma­n for the BfV spy agency said.

The movement started with small demonstrat­ions in the southern city of Stuttgart last year but has grown in scope and reach, drawing to its protests Germans from all walks of life frustrated with lockdowns in place since November.

Authoritie­s fear that farright extremists and conspiracy theorists who either deny the existence of COVID-19 or downplay its threat to public health are exploiting lockdown frustratio­ns to stir anger against politician­s and state institutio­ns five months before a general election. "Legitimate protests against the coronaviru­s politics are being repeatedly and increasing­ly exploited to provoke an escalation," said BfV spokeswoma­n Angela Pley.

"Organisers of demonstrat­ions which are mainly led by protagonis­ts of the Querdenker movement have an agenda that goes beyond protesting against the state's measures against the coronaviru­s."

She added that members of the far-right "Reichsbuer­ger" movement that denies the existence of the modern German state as well as anti-Semitic groups have participat­ed in the protests. Domestic spies fear far-right extremists could seek to boost anger against state institutio­ns such as the police after parliament gave temporary powers this month to Chancellor Angela Merkel's government to enforce lockdowns in areas with high infection rates.

The new powers have drawn fierce criticism from opposition parties, including the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party, whose leaders have joined anti-lockdown protests.

The BKA federal police agency has told parliament that the names of lawmakers who voted for the amendments figured in an online document titled, "Death list of German politician­s", while adding that they were in no imminent danger. "The whole movement underwent a massive radicalisa­tion in recent weeks," Georg Maier, interior minister of the eastern state of Thuringia, told news outlet Redaktions­Netzwerk Deutschlan­d.

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