Business Standard

German coup plot fuelled by conspiracy claims, Covid measures

-

An alleged plot to topple the German government, led by a self-styled prince, a retired paratroope­r and a Berlin judge, had its roots in a murky mixture of post-war grudges, antisemiti­c conspiracy theories and anger over recent pandemic restrictio­ns, experts say.

Police detained 25 people on Wednesday described as being part of Germany's Reichsbuer­ger, or

Reich Citizens, movement.

While the name might suggest a link to the Nazi era, it actually refers to the first modern pan-german nation formed when Prussia's King Wilhelm I and his chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, united numerous smaller states into a single empire, or Reich, in 1871.

Reich Citizens consider the partition of Germany by Allied powers after World War II and the subsequent democratic states that followed to have been illegal, arguing instead that the original Reich still exists.

“To some extent they distance themselves from the

Third Reich,” said Johannes Kiess of the Else-frenkel-brunswik Institute for Democracy Studies in Leipzig, referring to the German dictatorsh­ip under Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1945.

“But (they) have very little problems working together with any outright neo-nazi groups.” Kiess said Thursday that the rise of the Reich Citizens movement reflects the shifts that have taken place on the far-right end of the political spectrum in recent years.

Whereas outright opposition to the existing order was once a fringe position, anger at the restrictio­ns imposed during the coronaviru­s pandemic has proved fertile ground for antigovern­ment sentiment, he said.

“We now really have the middle classes being open to all sorts of conspiracy theories,” Kiess said.

He likened the developmen­t in Germany to that in the United States, where white supremacis­t movements joined with those who believe a “deep state” is controllin­g government in opposing the peaceful transition of power following the last presidenti­al election.

Police detained 25 people on Wednesday described as being part of Reich Citizens movement

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India