New York Daily News

Berlin says: To heil with these creeps

BOSTON STRONG AGAINST FASCISM

- The Associated Press

LEFT-WING groups and Berlin residents blocked more than 500 far-right extremists from marching Saturday to the place where high-ranking Nazi official Rudolf Hess died 30 years ago.

Police in riot gear kept the neo-Nazis and an estimated 1,000 counterpro­testers apart as the two sides staged competing rallies in the German capital’s western district of Spandau.

Far-right protesters had planned to march to the site of the former Spandau prison, where Hess hanged himself in 1987, but were forced to turn back after about a half-mile because of a blockade by counter-protesters.

After changing their route, the neoNazis, who had come from all over Germany and neighborin­g European countries, returned to Spandau’s main station for speeches amid jeers and chants of “Nazis go home!” and “You lost the war!” from counter-protesters.

Authoritie­s had imposed restrictio­ns on the march to ensure that it passed peacefully.

Organizers were told they couldn’t glorify Hess or the Nazi regime, carry weapons, drums or torches, and could bring only one flag for every 25 participan­ts.

Such restrictio­ns are common in Germany and rooted in the experience of the prewar Weimar Republic, when opposing political groups would try to forcibly interrupt their rivals’ rallies, resulting in frequent street violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States