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There are no reliable estimates for the number of members these new fringe groups have. Authorities estimate that they number in the several thousands, with many more who sympathize with the cause but aren't actively involved. Kerstin Koeditz, a left-wing lawmaker, said the proliferation of extremist groups has been helped by what she described as "a new wave of xenophobia from the heart of society." Persistent high joblessness in the east, growing anti-Muslim sentiment since 9/11, and fears that a collapse of the euro could destroy the German economy have given far-right groups plenty of political talking points, she said. Koeditz, who sits in the state parliament of Saxony for the Left Party, says far-right groups have also become more adept at evading laws in recent years. German law forbids the display of Nazi symbols and any public glorification of Adolf Hitler, so many groups host their websites abroad and use anonymous online message boards to communicate. Another reason for Germany's inability to keep up with emerging far-right groups is an unwieldy apparatus in which dozens of different law enforcement and intelligence agencies failed to talk to each other. Germany's security services admit that although the number of registered members of nationalist parties is declining
-- the NPD had 6,300 members last year compared to 6,600 in 2010 -- the number of violent far-right extremists is rising. Authorities say there are 9,800 violent extremists, up 300 from 9,500 in 2010. These are people who have been involved in violence or who are linked to groups that explicitly advocate violence. The domestic intelligence agency's annual report on extremism counted almost 17,000 far-right crimes in 2011, up slightly from the previous year. Of those, 755 were classed as violent crimes, such as attempted murder, arson or resisting arrest. The agency noted in its report that "one has to reckon with the existence and creation of right-wing terror groups as well as activities by individual right-wing terrorists." "The vast majority of the neo-Nazi scene cooperates with the NPD or supports it regularly," the report found. It added that members of fringe groups who aid the party do so in the hope that "they will see a personal benefit from the election successes of the NPD." The NPD receives over (EURO)1 million in government funding annually thanks to seats it holds in two state parliaments and experts say a ban on the party
-- with the loss of its offices -- could disrupt the nationalist movement. "But in the medium term the cadres of the NPD would continue in other organizations," said Staud. At the party's summer rally, the evening ends with a sing-along that includes the line "I like Adolf." Apfel, meanwhile, says he is not worried about a possible ban. Pressed to elaborate on his comments about acknowledging Germany's past crimes
-- and to say whether that includes the Holocaust -- Apfel pauses. "You know very well that it's illegal to openly discuss certain issues in Germany," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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