The National - News

Head of German intelligen­ce service faces calls to resign

- JAMIE PRENTIS

Germany’s spy chief is under fire for cultivatin­g close ties with far-right groups after it emerged that he shared parts of his annual report with a contact in the country’s anti-migration party.

Hans-Georg Maassen revealed the number of extremists in the country to Stephan Brandner, a parliament member for the extremist Alternativ­e for Germany, five weeks before a report containing the informatio­n was due to be officially published.

“We talked about different figures that are in there,” Mr Brandner told public broadcaste­r ARD.

Each summer, the BfV, Germany’s domestic intelligen­ce service that Mr Maassen heads, details the extent of extremist groups and their current threat level.

Mr Maassen denied wrongdoing and said the personal meeting on June 13 was part of Interior Ministry instructio­ns to update parliament­arians on potential security risks.

The revelation came after Mr Maassen was criticised for appearing to play down reports of far-right protesters making Nazi salutes, and for saying a video purporting to show the harassment of migrants in the city of Chemnitz was fake.

His comments directly went against the condemnati­on of the clashes by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Konstantin von Notz, a Green Party member of parliament, said the informatio­n should have been disclosed to only a small group of people. “Through his speculatio­n and the open ignorance of rightwing extremist structures Hans-Georg Maassen has once again massively harmed the reputation of the constituti­on,” he said. Opposition parties have already called for Mr Maassen to resign over allegation­s he has far-right views.

The AfD holds 94 seats in Germany’s Bundestag and has been accused of being Islamophob­ic, anti-Semitic and of having links to neo-Nazi groups.

“I don’t expect any trustworth­y assessment­s from Mr Maassen any more,” said Katrin Goring-Eckardt, the parliament­ary party leader for the Greens.

“The fact that he only commented on a video, but not on the acts of violence and the public displays of anti-constituti­onal symbols in Chemnitz, shows me that Mr Maassen is not up to the job,” she said.

Martin Schulz, the former president of the European Parliament, said on Wednesday the AfD were using the “classic tactic of fascism” by blaming migrants and other groups for Germany’s problems.

In late August, a German man was stabbed to death in Chemnitz, Saxony.

When it emerged the alleged perpetrato­rs were Iraqi and Syrian refugees, hundreds of far-right marchers filled the streets the next day demanding all undocument­ed migrants be deported.

 ?? AFP ?? German spy chief Hans-Georg Maassen arrives for a hearing in front of a parliament­ary control panel in Berlin on Wednesday
AFP German spy chief Hans-Georg Maassen arrives for a hearing in front of a parliament­ary control panel in Berlin on Wednesday

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