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Feds offer help after violent neo-Nazi protest

- By Frank Jordans Frank Jordans is an Associated Press writer.

BERLIN — Germany’s top security official offered to send federal assistance to the eastern state of Saxony on Tuesday following violence during a far-right protest in the city of Chemnitz that left at least 18 people injured.

The protest late Monday, sparked by the killing of a 35year-old German man in an altercatio­n with migrants over the weekend, erupted into clashes between neo-Nazis and left-wing counter-protesters. Opposition parties criticized police for failing to prevent the violence.

“The police in Saxony are in a difficult situation,” Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said. “Should it be requested, the federal government will provide police support.”

He was backed by Chancellor Angela Merkel, who condemned the violence.

“Should Saxony need help to maintain law and order, and to uphold the law, the federal government stands ready,” she said.

Saxony’s police chief Juergen Georgie acknowledg­ed authoritie­s had underestim­ated the size of the protest. Initial estimates had forecasts about 1,000 far-right protesters and half that number of counterpro­testers would descend on Chemnitz, he said.

In the end, some 600 officers struggled to prevent 6,000 supporters of the far-right from breaking through police lines. Footage showed demonstrat­ors performing Nazi salutes and chanting “the national resistance is marching here!”

Georgie said the police presence in Chemnitz would be stepped up in the coming days, with more protests planned.

Green lawmaker Konstantin von Notz urged Seehofer to consider resigning, accusing him of fanning anti-migrant sentiment over the past year. Von Notz told the news portal t-online.de that the violence in Chemnitz recalled events elsewhere in eastern Germany during the early 1990s, when authoritie­s failed to stop farright mobs from attacking migrants.

The state of Saxony has long been a hotbed of anti-migrant sentiment, with some accusing police of turning a blind eye to sympathize­rs in their own ranks. The far-right Alternativ­e for Germany party received almost a quarter of the vote in Chemnitz last year.

Chemnitz police said they have arrested a 22-year-old Syrian and a 21-year-old Iraqi on suspicion of manslaught­er in the stabbing death of the German man after a street festival early Sunday. Prosecutor­s said the killing was preceded by a verbal confrontat­ion that escalated.

 ?? Jens Meyer / Associated Press ?? Police guard right wing demonstrat­ors during a far-right demonstrat­ion in Dresden, after the killing of a German man in an altercatio­n with migrants in the eastern city of Chemnitz.
Jens Meyer / Associated Press Police guard right wing demonstrat­ors during a far-right demonstrat­ion in Dresden, after the killing of a German man in an altercatio­n with migrants in the eastern city of Chemnitz.

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