Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Germany saturated by soaring far-right violence

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GERMANY’S Interior Ministry conveyed a striking reality on Monday that violent crimes in the country by the so-called “Reich Citizens” movement hit a total of 157 in the second half of 2018, while the number was 115 the previous year. The violence included 93 blackmail cases and 22 assaults, the ministry said.

recorded an increase in violent crime from the so-called “Reich Citizens” movement, known as the Reichsbürg­ers, last year, the Interior Ministry said on Monday. A total of 157 politicall­y motivated acts of violence have so far been recorded for 2018, compared to 115 in the previous year. The ministry issued the figures after a request from the Green Party in the German Parliament. Around three quarters of the approximat­ely 19,000 Reichsbürg­er members are men, the Interior Ministry said. The violence included 93 blackmail cases and 22 assaults. In total, authoritie­s recorded 804 politicall­y motivated crimes of all sorts committed by the groups, following 771 in 2017.

Members of the movement do not recognize the modern German state and its laws but believe the former German Reich still exists. As Reichsbürg­er

GERMANY

members refuse to acknowledg­e the German constituti­onal state, they refuse to pay taxes or fines for the German state. They still follow the legal rules of the Third Reich and stick to the borders of the 1930s.

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

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. German police also discovered evidence of Reichsbürg­er members in their own ranks. 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 include other cities.

MIGRANTS BECOME VICTIMS OF ARSON ATTACK

Migrants once again became the victims of growing right-wing terrorism in the country. German police reported an arson attack on a house of a Syrian family in city of Magdeburg, in a latest example of a spate of hate crimes that was to shock Germany. The family and other residents of the apartment building were taken unhurt outside, with the attack caused only property damage, according to reports. At the same time, unknown assailants set fire to a car in the same street, as the police refused to rule out a connection between to arson attacks.

According to a report by the Leipzig-based Competence Center for Right-Wing Extremism and Democracy Research, more than one-out-ofthree Germans think foreigners come only to exploit the welfare state. In August, massive far-right rallies rocked the city of Chemnitz, in eastern Germany where skinheads hounded migrants and performed the illegal Hitler salute. After the violence in Chemnitz, German police detained six men suspected of forming a far-right militant organizati­on that assaulted foreigners in the eastern city of Chemnitz and also planned attacks on politician­s. The men are alleged to have formed a group calling itself “Revolution Chemnitz.” The arrests once again cast an uncomforta­ble spotlight on the growing far-right terrorism in Chemnitz, which is a stronghold of the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD).

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