The Jewish Chronicle

Austria government MPs in ‘blood libel’ Facebook group

- BY LIAM HOARE VIENNA

AUSTRIA’S FAR-RIGHT Freedom Party (FPÖ) stands accused of stoking hatred online after two of its MPs were found to be members of a private Facebook group in which antisemiti­c and pro-Nazi content was shared.

FPÖ MPs Edith Mühlberghu­ber and Peter Gerstner were part of the “German Reich” Facebook group, which has 4,000 members and is run by Karl Dettmer, whose extreme-right ideology rejects the legitimacy of the modern German postwar state.

Posts shared within the group — discovered by the Stop the Right watchdog — included messages about an antisemiti­c blood libel and calls for “the Jew” George Soros, the American philanthro­pist, to be shot.

Propaganda glorifying National Socialism as well as quotes from the French Holocaust denier Robert Faurisson was also posted in the group. “Not a single

Jew has been killed in a gas chamber,” the post in question read.

FPÖ general secretary Christian Hafenecker said last week that his party and MPs had nothing to do with “National Socialist Facebook sites.”

He claimed Ms Mühlberghu­ber and Mr Gerstner had been made members of the group without their knowledge and have since left. Mr Gerstner himself told Der Standard he was “not active” within the group.

But Mr Hafenecker was one of a number of FPÖ functionar­ies implicated in another controvers­ial Facebook group, “FPÖ Page Administra­tors.”

Some of its members — including Mr Hafenecker as well as people previously expelled from the party — had elsewhere on Facebook shared content claiming Hitler “wanted peace, not war” and posted comments accusing “the Zionist elite” of desiring to start a Third World War.

According to the investigat­ive weekly Falter, it was deleted hours after they made inquires with Hafenecker about the group.

Social Democratic Party MP Sabine Schatz called reports about the “German Reich” group “unacceptab­le” and demanded Chancellor Sebastian Kurz distance himself “from these racist and antisemiti­c comments.”

The Freedom Party returned to government with Mr Kurz’s centre-right People’s Party in December 2017.

A January 2018 speech seemingly signalled FPÖ leader Heinz-Christian Strache’s desire for his party to change. “It is our duty to stand against antisemiti­sm, racism, and totalitari­an thought,” he said.

But incidents of extreme-right activity have dogged the FPÖ ever since. “Not a day goes by without a Freedom Party member or functionar­y stoking hatred online,” Ms Schatz said. And these revelation­s came just as the party was dealing with the fallout from a screening of a controvers­ial documentar­y, held by the FPÖ on February 18 in parliament, which appeared to praise a former Nazi member.

Produced by state broadcaste­r ORF, the film cast Franz Dinghofer, a prewar vice-chancellor, as a “builder of the republic”.

Mr Strache praised Dinghofer as “the most important and prominent figure” on the German nationalis­t wing of Austrian politics.

But Mr Dinghofer, a founding member of the Greater German Nationalis­t Party and supporter of Austrian union with Germany, was also a known antisemite and, after July 1940, a member of the Nazi party.

“That this documentar­y idealised a genuine antisemite and National Socialist” is indefensib­le, said Willi Mernyi, chair of Austria’s Mauthausen Committee, which conducts educationa­l work around the concentrat­ion camp of the same name. Opposition MP Alma Zadic called the event a “slap in the face to the victims of National Socialism.”

Posts called for ‘the Jew’ George Soros to be shot

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 ??  ?? Edith Mühlberghu­ber
Edith Mühlberghu­ber

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