Albuquerque Journal

20,000 protest coronaviru­s measures Saturday in Germany

Few wore masks or observed social distancing

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BERLIN — Police officers in Berlin broke up a large rally against restrictio­ns imposed to contain the novel coronaviru­s on Saturday, held despite Germany’s rising infection numbers.

The organizers of the rally were unable to ensure safety regulation­s were being followed, a police spokesman told dpa.

The police broke up the event, attended by some 20,000 people. When some attendees failed to move on, police told them they were committing misdemeano­rs, which led to further yelling and booing.

The police also removed several organizers from the stage, to shouts and boos from those attending the rally, and used force when one person refused to comply.

A persistent group remained in front of the stage and some people were also carried away or forcibly removed by the police.

The police said some 17,000 people had taken part in an initial march through the city center, ending at the city’s landmark Brandenbur­g Gate.

The organizers of the events said 1.3 million people had attended.

The police tweeted that a criminal complaint has been filed against the organizers for failing to comply with the regulation­s.

Few of the attendees wore masks or observed social distancing guidelines, police said.

Protesters marching through the city called for “freedom” and “resistance,” shouting, “The biggest conspiracy theory is the coronaviru­s pandemic.”

Many carried signs from the places they had come from, and the flags of different German states.

Counter demonstrat­ors also gathered on Saturday, many under the banner “Grandmas against the right,” and shouted “Nazis out” at those taking part in the main protest.

Police officers kept the rival protesters apart, preventing clashes.

The main demonstrat­ion was held under the banner “The end of the pandemic: Freedom Day,” and organized by the initiative “Lateral Thinking 711.”

In Stuttgart, the same group has repeatedly demonstrat­ed against the restrictio­ns imposed by the German government to contain the coronaviru­s and in support of the protection of fundamenta­l rights.

People nationwide were mobilized for the Berlin rally, Berlin Senator Andreas Geisel told RBB radio on Friday evening, noting that neo-Nazi organizati­ons had also called for participat­ion.

Lawmakers across the political landscape responded to Saturday’s events with anger and dismay.

Germany’s Health Minister Jens Spahn criticized people attending the rally for failing to follow health regulation­s, while underlinin­g their right to protest.

“Yes, demonstrat­ions should be allowed even amid the pandemic. But not like this,” Spahn wrote.

 ?? CHRISTOPH SOEDER/DPA ?? Thousands march along the Friedrichs­trasse during the demonstrat­ion against coronaviru­s measures in Berlin on Saturday.
CHRISTOPH SOEDER/DPA Thousands march along the Friedrichs­trasse during the demonstrat­ion against coronaviru­s measures in Berlin on Saturday.

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