Gulf Times

Police raid officers accused of neo-Nazi online chats

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More than 200 police in western Germany yesterday swooped on colleagues accused of spreading “repulsive” far-right propaganda in online chatrooms, a state interior minister said.

In the latest political scandal to rock Germany’s security services, Herbert Reul, interior minister of Germany’s most populous region North RhineWestp­halia (NRW), said the raids targeted 34 police stations and private homes connected to 11 main suspects.

The police officers are believed to have shared more than 100 neo-Nazi images in WhatsApp groups including swastikas, pictures of Adolf Hitler and a digitally altered image of a refugee in the gas chamber of a concentrat­ion camp.

“This is the worst and most repulsive kind of hate-baiting,” Reul told reporters, adding that he expected the investigat­ion to turn up further chats with offensive content.

The suspects could face charges including incitement to racial hatred.

A total of 29 police officers are facing disciplina­ry proceeding­s connected to the case and have been suspended pending their outcome.

A spokesman for the federal interior ministry called the reports “highly alarming” and demanded a quick and thorough investigat­ion to determine the extent of any far-right infiltrati­on of the police.

“It casts a negative light on police across Germany in our view and is a slap in the face for officers who demonstrat­e their great loyalty to the free democratic order every day under the most difficult circumstan­ces,” the spokesman Steve Alter told reporters.

Reul said a probe against one police unit in the town of Muelheim an der Ruhr discovered the chats, which he called “a disgrace for the NRW police force” as a whole.

He said he was appointing an ombudsman to investigat­e the extent of racist behaviour in the state’s police ranks.

“Right-wing extremists and neo-Nazis have absolutely no place in the North Rhine-Westphalia police, our police,” he said, adding that it was up to authoritie­s now to show a “crystal clear political profile” that rejected the far right.

Germany has been embroiled in a string of revelation­s of rightwing extremism within the ranks of the police and military.

In July, prosecutor­s announced the arrest of a former police officer and his wife who they suspect of having sent threatenin­g e-mails to politician­s and other public figures across Germany.

The anonymous messages were all signed “NSU 2.0”, a reference to the German neo-Nazi cell National Socialist Undergroun­d that committed a string of racist murders in the 2000s.

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