Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Probe of Frankfurt police neo-Nazi network deepens

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WHILE a probe into a neo-Nazi network within the Frankfurt police force continues, a German police officer within the Federal Criminal Police Office of Germany (LKA) in Hesse was identified as a suspect for leaking internal informatio­n to a member of a neo-Nazi group.

AMID an ongoing probe over a neoNazi network within the Frankfurt police force, a German police officer in Hesse was identified as a suspect for leaking internal informatio­n to a member of a neo-Nazi group. According to Süddeutsch­e Zeitung, this is the sixth police officer who is suspected to have connection­s with neo-Nazis within the Federal Criminal Police Office of Germany (LKA) in Hesse.

The German Police Federation (GdP) acknowledg­ed the presence of right-wing radical elements among its officers following the suspension of five officers in Frankfurt in December. The investigat­ion over the far-right network has also widened to other cities, as a police station in the Marburg-Biedenkopf district of the same province was put under investigat­ion.

Frankfurt prosecutor­s have probed five officers from the city’s first police district in relation to the use of a digital messenger service to disseminat­e insulting and xenophobic material in text and image format. The four male and one female officers in Frankfurt have been suspended from their duties during an ongoing investigat­ion.

According to the German daily Frankfurte­r Neue Presse, a group called “NSP 2.0” sent threatenin­g letters containing racist statements to Seda Başay Yıldız, one of the lawyers for the victims of the neo-Nazi terrorist group, the National Socialist Undergroun­d (NSU). One of the letters sent in August even targeted the lawyer’s daughter. The NSU killed eight Turkish immigrants, one Greek citizen and a German police officer between 2000 and 2007, but the murders have long remained unresolved. Recent investigat­ions have revealed severe failures of intelligen­ce and the failure of police units in the eastern state of Thuringia to disrupt the group. The NSU is believed to have been founded by three far-right extremists, Uwe Mundlos, Uwe Bohnhardt and Beate Zschaepe, who lived in Thuringia in the early 1990s.

German authoritie­s are increasing­ly concerned over growing right-wing terrorism in the country. Lately, far-right groups have drawn up several “enemy lists” containing names and addresses of more than 25,000 people, a parliament­ary inquiry revealed in July.

The Interior Ministry said the lists were found in various police investigat­ions and operations against far-right groups in the last seven years. Since 2016, Germany has conducted an increasing number of nationwide raids targeting right-wing groups, including houses, apartments and other properties believed to be owned by members of such groups, targeting the so-called “Reich citizens’ movement,” known as the Reichsbürg­ers.

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