Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

German protest condemned

Far-right demonstrat­ors tried to storm parliament building

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BERLIN — Senior German officials Sunday condemned attempts by far-right demonstrat­ors and others to storm the parliament building in Berlin after a protest against the country’s pandemic restrictio­ns.

Hundreds of people, some waving the flag of the German Reich of 1871-1918 and other far-right banners, breached a security barrier outside the Reichstag late Saturday but were intercepte­d by police and forcibly removed.

“Reich flags and rightwing extremist provocatio­ns in front of the German Bundestag are an unbearable attack on the heart of our democracy,” German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said Sunday, referencin­g the federal legislativ­e body. “We will never accept this.”

Steinmeier said people had the right to express their anger about the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and to question them publicly, including with demonstrat­ions.

“My sympathy ends where protesters allow themselves to be used by enemies of democracy and political agitators,” he added.

Police used pepper spray to drive back the protesters, who earlier in the day had participat­ed in a large rally through the capital.

About 300 people were arrested in front of the Reichstag and after an incident at the Russian Embassy, according to police.

Berlin’s top security official, Andreas Geisel, praised three officers who stood alone against the protesters outside the Reichstag until reinforcem­ents arrived. Opposition parties criticized the police’s failure to station enough officers around the building despite public warnings from far-right extremists that they planned to try to enter.

Robert Habeck, the co-leader of Germany’s Green party, called for a thorough investigat­ion into the incident.

“The fact that Nazis with imperial war flags try to storm the Bundestag recalls the darkest period in German history,” he told the Funke media group.

“An incident like on Saturday evening must not be allowed to happen again,” Habeck said. “I expect [federal] Interior Minister Horst Seehofer to decisively combat right-wing extremism at all levels.”

The head of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right party, Annegret Kramp-Karrenbaue­r, expressed anger at the incident. “That the Reich flag should fly again at the German Bundestag is intolerabl­e,” she said.

The co-leader of the farright Alternativ­e for Germany party, Alice Weidel, described the protesters who tried to storm the building as “a few vandals” whose behavior was unacceptab­le. Members of her party had taken part in the rally against the pandemic restrictio­ns earlier in the day.

German Vice Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who is seeking to succeed Merkel in next year’s election, said he was confident that security forces would closely analyze what had happened Saturday and ensure it couldn’t occur again.

But he insisted that the incident shouldn’t distract from the fact that “the overwhelmi­ng, very big majority of citizens in this country are clever and sensible, and they agree with all of the decisions that we took to protect people’s health and for the benefit of the economy and social cohesion.”

Opinion polls show only one in 10 Germans reject the country’s current prevention measures, including the requiremen­t to wear masks on public transport, in stores and in some public buildings such as libraries and schools.

Police on Sunday ordered an anti-mask gathering of about 2,000 people at the Victory Column in Berlin to disband, saying people weren’t respecting distancing rules. Several people were detained.

 ?? (AP/dpa/Christoph Soeder) ?? A man in front of the Victory Column in Berlin is led away by police officers Sunday during a protest against Germany’s coronaviru­s measures.
(AP/dpa/Christoph Soeder) A man in front of the Victory Column in Berlin is led away by police officers Sunday during a protest against Germany’s coronaviru­s measures.

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