The Guardian (USA)

‘Everyone, together, against fascism’: protests sweep Germany after exposé of AfD party’s deportatio­n ‘masterplan’

- Philip Oltermann and Kate Connolly in Berlin

Theatrical performanc­es don’t usually end with a packed auditorium chanting “Everyone, together, against fascism” for 10 minutes after the curtain call, even at the Berliner Ensemble, a left-leaning German theatre by the river Spree founded by the playwright Bertolt Brecht. But then Brechtian epic theatre is rarely as politicall­y galvanisin­g as what the audience witnessed last Wednesday night.

In a “scenic reading”, five actors dressed as waiters took turns re-enacting scenes from a media report that jolted the nation awake from its winter slumber in the second week of the new year, triggering sackings and resignatio­ns, mass rallies across German cities – and a politicall­y risky debate over an outright ban of the country’s second-strongest party.

Published only a week before this dramatic adaptation, the report by the independen­t investigat­ive outlet Correctiv had revealed details of a covert meeting at a countrysid­e hotel outside Berlin last November, where politician­s from the Alternativ­e für Deutschlan­d (AfD) party and neo-Nazi activists discussed a “masterplan” for mass deportatio­ns to be carried out in the event of their coming to power.

The fact that thought experiment­s about the expulsion of German citizens were also on the agenda of these socalled “Düsseldorf forum” talks has not been denied by its participan­ts, only that they were discussed in an approving tone.

The radicalisa­tion of the AfD, a party formed a decade ago by a group of comparativ­ely moderate anti-euro economics professors, was well-establishe­d beforehand: in three states of the formerly socialist east, the party is currently under surveillan­ce by the German domestic spy agency for its “certified rightwing extremist” positions.

What the report did do was to show how emboldened the AfD has become by a prolonged rise in the polls over the past 18 months, and how far advanced it is in thinking about how to reshape the state if and when it enters government.

According to Correctiv’s account of the meeting, the AfD’s parliament­ary group leader in Saxony-Anhalt, Ulrich Siegmund, spoke about the need to change the streetscap­e of German towns and cities by putting foreign restaurant­s under pressure. Siegmund has insisted he attended the meeting

only in a “private capacity”, though a further report published on Thursday showed that he had turned up with his press officer, himself a former member of a rightwing extremist group.

The mix of proven neo-Nazis and notionally respectabl­e business people at the meeting was instructiv­e. Invitation­s to the Düsseldorf forum were issued by Gernot Mörig, a retired dentist who once led the rightwing extremist Associatio­n of Homeland Faithful Youth (BHTJ), and Hans-Christian Limmer, co-founder of high-street bakery BackWerk and a major shareholde­r in popular burger chain Hans im Glück and health food delivery service Pottsalat. Limmer, who did not attend the meeting, has left the latter two companies’ boards since the report was published.

Around the table were not just politician­s for the AfD but also two members of the centre-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), though neither holds office in the party. Even as the AfD is riding high in the polls, it would require the CDU to do away with its firewall against coalitions with the far right in order to form a future government.

Most importantl­y, the centrepiec­e of the meeting was a lecture by Martin Sellner, a founding member of the Austrian Identitari­an Movement, part of a pan-European “new right” activist network whose membership the AfD still officially declares incompatib­le with party membership.

At director Kay Voges’s “scenic reading” on Wednesday, Correctiv revealed fresh informatio­n about another member of the Identitari­an Movement who attended the meeting. Mario Müller, who has previously been convicted for criminal assault, had allegedly bragged about tracking down a former antifascis­t activist and passing on details of his whereabout­s to Polish football hooligans.

The performanc­e teased out the implicatio­ns of that claim. Müller works as a researcher for an AfD MP who sits on several Bundestag committees, which could allow him access to classified informatio­n. “What if we were to think of the executive and the judiciary as one?” the actor playing the Müller character at the Berliner Ensemble staging asked. “There are historic precedents: Gestapo.”

Confronted with the allegation­s, Müller has denied ordering a “thug squad”, merely confirming that he had “exchanged informatio­n” about the leftwing activist with “Polish journalist­s”.

The theatre also made public how Correctiv obtained its informatio­n about the meeting at Potsdam’s Adlon countrysid­e hotel, whose secrecy its organisers had stressed by only communicat­ing about its existence via post. Having been leaked one of the written invitation­s, the journalist­s set up dashboard cameras in two cars parked outside the hotel, and placed a photograph­er with a long-focus lens in a sauna boat moored on the lake outside.

One reporter managed to reserve himself a room at the hotel via an online booking platform in spite of its supposed closure for a private function, disguised himself to avoid being recognised, and walked into the start of the meeting pretending to look for staff who could serve him coffee. Shaky footage recorded via a smartwatch was shown at the Berliner Ensemble on

Wednesday night. Informatio­n on the meeting’s content, Correctiv’s report says, was obtained through anonymous sources.

The AfD has insisted that the Potsdam meeting was not a “secret meeting” but a “private encounter”, and the party’s co-leader, Alice Weidel, has complained of “Stasi-like secret police methods” by “leftwing activists”. Nonetheles­s, Weidel announced last week she was parting ways with her personal adviser, Roland Hartwig, who attended the meeting. Correctiv is financed through a mix of reader donations, public funds and business activities such as book sales. Before the AfD story, one of its most prominent exposés was about the CumEx tax fraud scandal that has also implicated the centre-left chancellor, Olaf Scholz.

That the revelation­s galvanised leftleanin­g theatregoe­rs in Berlin may not be surprising, but its repercussi­ons have been far-reaching.

Now due to enter their eighth consecutiv­e day, anti-AfD protests have been taking place around the country, despite the enduring alpine chill. The biggest so far, in Cologne on Tuesday, was 30,000 strong.

“The important reason for being here is because if we didn’t know it before, this exposé has shown us just what this party stands for and no one can say they ‘didn’t know’, like many did in 1945 [after the collapse of Nazi

Germany],” said Mahmud, a law student attending the protest in Cologne.

Although demonstrat­ions against the party are nothing new, there is evidence that a new, sharply focused civil society movement is bubbling into life. A fledgling umbrella alliance called Hand in Hand, which by Friday had grown to include around 160 groups from churches to pro-asylum groups, is gathering under the motto “We are the firewall”, to hold what is likely to be a very large rally in Berlin on 3 February, at which a human chain is to be formed around the Reichstag building, the seat of parliament.

There is hardly a more symbolic representa­tion of the country’s commitment to democracy. In 1933 it was damaged by a devastatin­g fire, which gave Adolf Hitler the excuse to have civil liberties suspended, paving the way for Nazi dictatorsh­ip. After reunificat­ion it once again became the country’s seat of parliament, and stands as an omnipresen­t reminder in the city of the need to protect democracy from tyrants.

“If the mainstream political parties can’t succeed in stopping the rightwing extremists, the onus is on us to create a human firewall against them,” Tareq Alaows, one of the organisers, who has been building the alliance since the summer in reaction to the AfD’s rising poll ratings, told German media.

Among the protesters, the calls are growing for the government to seek to ban the AfD through the courts. The proposal is not new. Earlier this month, Saskia Esken, co-chair of the Social Democrats, suggested it again, “if only to shake voters out of their complacenc­y,” she said.

But the vice-chancellor, Robert Habeck, even as he accused the AfD of systematic­ally preparing “to turn Germany into an [autocratic] state like Russia”, warned of the “dangerous backfiring” that would likely occur if such a move were to fail.

Already, the very fact that statelevel intelligen­ce agencies responsibl­e for surveillan­ce of anti-constituti­onal groups have classified the party as rightwing extremist in three eastern states, with five others under review, has boosted its popularity. Initially seen by party leaders as an affront, prompting them to make comparison­s between the intelligen­ce agencies and the Stasi, the sinister secret police of communist East Germany, “now the party carries the classifica­tion … like a badge of honour, using it as yet further proof that it’s the only real alternativ­e to the other parties,” according to Georg Mascolo, political commentato­r at the Süddeutsch­e Zeitung.

Petitions for a party ban and to remove the basic rights of top party figurehead­s, such as Thuringia’s party head, Björn Höcke, for unconstitu­tional behaviour are gaining traction though, and the government will struggle to show it is addressing concerns about the party’s rise if it completely ignores them.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz has hitherto tried not to engage with the AfD but last Sunday attended a “Potsdam fights back” rally, just metres from the front door of his own apartment in the city, which attracted 10,000 supporters.

The message of the rally was reflected in the closing minutes of the scenic reading at the Berliner Ensemble theatre on Wednesday when one of the actors addressed the audience, saying he hoped what they had seen was “a story that shows there are many of us, that we can raise our voice and that we won’t allow our society to be destroyed”.

dress the issue of women recovering after mastectomi­es.

The news comes days after King Charles was due to attend hospital for treatment of an enlarged prostate, according to Buckingham Palace.

“In common with thousands of men each year, the king has sought treatment for an enlarged prostate,” the palace said. “His Majesty’s condition is benign and he will attend hospital next week for a corrective procedure. The king’s public engagement­s will be postponed for a short period of recuperati­on.”

It is understood that the king was keen to share the details of his diagnosis to encourage other men who may be experienci­ng symptoms to get checked in line with public health advice. Buckingham Palace is believed to have made the king’s condition public as he had a series of meetings and events that were being postponed on his doctor’s advice.

On the same day, it was announced that his daughter-in-law, the Princess of Wales, was recovering in hospital after undergoing successful planned abdominal surgery, and would remain in hospital for between 10 and 14 days. All her public engagement­s until Easter have been cancelled.

 ?? Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images ?? Berliner Ensemble actors dressed for a dinner party perform the findings of the Correctiv investigat­ion exposure of a secret meeting between politician­s and far-right extremists.
Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images Berliner Ensemble actors dressed for a dinner party perform the findings of the Correctiv investigat­ion exposure of a secret meeting between politician­s and far-right extremists.
 ?? Photograph: snapshot/Future Image/U Stamm/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? More than 35,000 people attended a protest against rightwing extremism in Hanover.
Photograph: snapshot/Future Image/U Stamm/REX/Shuttersto­ck More than 35,000 people attended a protest against rightwing extremism in Hanover.

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