The Guardian (USA)

Far-right German politician arrested after ‘Sieg Heil’ salutes heard

- Reuters in Berlin

A legislator with the far-right Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AfD) party was arrested on Monday on charges including displaying forbidden totalitari­an symbols, with neighbours of his fraternity complainin­g of often hearing the Nazi “Sieg Heil” victory salute.

Newly elected Daniel Halemba, 22, was due to take up his seat in the Bavarian regional parliament later on Monday. He is a member of the Teutonia Prague student fraternity, whose premises were raided by police in September.

During the raid, officials said, they found forbidden symbols – Germany’s constituti­on forbids the display of symbols of totalitari­an regimes such as the swastika – and neighbours complained of hearing “Sieg Heil” (Hail Victory) from inside.

A prosecutio­n spokespers­on said Halemba would be brought before court later on Monday or Tuesday. Charges include inciting racist abuse.

A national conversati­on that is increasing­ly dominated by discussion of migration has helped the AfD to a series of strong electoral showings far beyond its old heartlands in the postindust­rial east, with voters seemingly unperturbe­d by its rightward drift.

The party, second in polls in several eastern states, achieved record results in the western states of Bavaria and

Hesse on 8 October.

The party and its youth wing are under observatio­n in several states, with prominent figures such as the lead European parliament candidate Maximilian Krah comparing immigratio­n to colonialis­m and stating that “oriental landgrabs” lead to “sexual abuse of European girls”.

Halemba, who joined the fraternity as a law student in Würzburg, has named Björn Höcke, leader of the AfD’s far-right wing, as his political role model.

“They want to arrest me, an elected state parliament member, three days before I take my seat, using a totally lawless arrest warrant,” said Halemba in a video shared on his lawyer’s Telegram channel.

Germany’s fraterniti­es, many of which date back to the country’s first unificatio­n in the 19th century, are notorious for their conservati­ve, often nationalis­tic philosophy.

 ?? ?? Daniel Halemba attends the constituen­t meeting of the AfD parliament­ary group in Bavaria’s state parliament. Photograph: Peter Kneffel/ dpa
Daniel Halemba attends the constituen­t meeting of the AfD parliament­ary group in Bavaria’s state parliament. Photograph: Peter Kneffel/ dpa

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