The Jerusalem Post

Germany to permit Palestinia­n terrorist group to field candidates for Bundestag

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

The German Interior Ministry declined to bar the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine from campaignin­g as a political party in the September general election to the Bundestag.

The PFLP has been designated by the EU and US as a terrorist organizati­on.

A spokeswoma­n for the Interior Ministry told The Jerusalem Post on Tuesday that a party’s entitlemen­t to run is “not dependent on the assessment of politics or candidates.”

When asked by the Post if the Interior Ministry plans to outlaw the PFLP, the spokeswoma­n said it “does not, in general, comment on bans.”

The spokeswoma­n said, “candidates from parties and candidates in Germany cannot be banned or allowed by the Interior Ministry in Germany,” adding that the federal election committee determines the registrati­on of candidate lists.

The PFLP is running on a joint list with the Marxist-Leninist Party of Germany.

The PFLP has murdered scores of Israelis in terrorist attacks and hijacked airplanes. According to a Post investigat­ion of the PFLP in Germany, it has conducted multiple celebrator­y events over the years in Berlin.

The ministry said, “The organizati­on PFLP is not a party in the meaning of Article 21 of the Basic Law [Germany’s constituti­onal law] party laws and cannot campaign [independen­tly] in the election.”

Asked about a letter from MKs from Yesh Atid and German lawmakers urging Interior Minister Thomas de Maizière to ban Hezbollah and the PFLP in Germany, the spokeswoma­n said she will not comment on the facts of the case.

According to Germany’s most recent intelligen­ce report from 2016, there are 950 active Hezbollah operatives in the country.

Volker Beck, a Green Party Bundestag deputy who co-signed the letter to de Maizière, told the Post on Wednesday that the Interior Ministry has not addressed the concerns of the letter.

“The problem is that a terrorist organizati­on [such as the] PFLP can do what it wants and how it wants because it is not banned.”

This leads to an absurd situation where the PFLP can

participat­e in an election, he said.

“The Interior Minister must finally issue a ban of the PFLP in Germany,” said Beck.

For observers of terrorism in Germany, it is unclear why the ministry is reluctant to outlaw the Palestinia­n organizati­on, which is widely recognized as a terrorist group.

The ministry did shut down the radical left-wing website linksunten.indymedia.org last Friday.

De Maizière said the portal was closed because it was “showing hate and legitimizi­ng violence against police officers.” •

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