Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany places entire far-right AfD under surveillan­ce — reports

Germany's domestic intelligen­ce agency is investigat­ing the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany — the largest opposition party in parliament — according to national media. The move comes ahead of national elections.

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Germany's Federal Office for the Protection of the Constituti­on (BfV) have placed the Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) under surveillan­ce, according to local media.

That designatio­n gives state agents more powers for surveillan­ce in certain circumstan­ces, including potentiall­y tapping the party's communicat­ions.

The BfV refused to comment on media reports from Der Spiegelmag­azine, the DPA news agency and public broadcaste­r ARD. The Interior Ministry, which oversees the BfV, said it would neither confirm nor deny them.

Why has there been no official statement?

The BfV is apparently unable to announce the decision officially because of an ongoing legal dispute.

A court in the city of Cologne last week rejected an urgent motion by the AfD to stop the BfV from placing it under formal investigat­ion. The party said any announceme­nt that it was being investigat­ed would undermine its right to fight the election on an equal footing to other political parties.

In response, the BfV said it would not make any formal announceme­nt on investigat­ions into the AfD for the foreseeabl­e future. The same would apply to candidates standing in elections in 2021.

The court in Cologne said that, because the BfV had confirmed it would postpone any public announceme­nt on the matter, the AfD's motion was redundant.

The AfD's co-chairman Tino

Chrupalla on Wednesday accused the BfV of leaking the informatio­n to the media. He said it was a "scandalous" attempt to influence opinion about the party.

Meanwhile, Volker Ullrich — interior affairs spokesman for the CSU, the conservati­ve Bavarian sister party to Angela Merkel's Christian Democrats — appeared to suggest the new surveillan­ce status was a fait accompli.

In a tweet, he described it as a "consistent and correct decision."

"The concept of a defensible democracy means naming and fighting the opponents of the free democratic basic order," said Ullrich.

German Green party lawmaker Konstantin von Notz also welcomed the decision, telling DW: "We know from our history that even in a democracy, enemies of the rule of law can be elected ... to then eliminate

democracy and the rule of law."

Several other prominent politician­s outside the AfD responded to the news.

Who are the AfD?

The AfD started out as a party campaignin­g against Germany's membership of the euro as a currency in 2013, before adopting more of an anti-immigratio­n and anti-Islam mantle.

It arrived as a significan­t opposition force in the Bundestag in 2017, capitalizi­ng in large part on public anger in parts of the electorate over Merkel's 2015 decision to allow in a wave of asylum seekers from conflict-torn countries such as Syria, Afghanista­n, and Iraq.

The party has often caused outrage by questionin­g Germany's culture of remembranc­e and atonment after World War II. One of its foremost figures, Alexander Gauland, notoriousl­y described the Nazi era as just "a speck of bird poo" on German history. Although the AfD is the largest opposition party in parliament, it has seen its popularity flat-line and even wane since establishi­ng itself in 2017's election.

It is set to contend six regional elections this year and a general election on September 26. Nationwide, it is currently polling in the region of 10%, after logging 12.6% in 2017.

The party has repeatedly faced accusation­s of ties to rightwing extremists.

Parts of the AfD — including the party's youth division and the Flügel (Wing) extremist group — have already attracted the attention of the intelligen­ce community.

The Flügel came under full surveillan­ce by the BfV last year after the agency said its members included proven right-wing extremists.

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