Far-right crime hits record high in Germany
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[May 04, 2021]
By Joseph Nasr
BERLIN (Reuters) -Germany saw a big jump
last year in politically motiviated crimes, and offences commited by
far-right supporters hit a record high, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer
said on Tuesday.
Far-right offences were up nearly 6% from the previous year at 23,064,
and accounted for more than half of all politically motivated crimes,
the highest level since police started collecting such data in 2001.
Violent crimes classified as political in nature rose by nearly 20%
year-on-year to 3,365 and included 11 murders and 13 attempted murders,
Seehofer said.
"These numbers are very alarming mainly because a trend has been
established over the last few years," he said. "During the pandemic we
observed a further polarisation of the political discussion."
Security is emerging as a key political issue ahead of a national
election in September. German intelligence fears that far-right
activists are trying to exploit public frustration over lockdowns
imposed to halt the spread of COVID-19 to incite violence against state
institutions.
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German Interior Minister Horst Seehofer attends a news conference on
politically motived crimes in Germany, in Berlin, Germany May 4,
2021. REUTERS/Annegret Hilse/Pool
Recent politically motivated murders include the
shooting of nine people in shisha bars by a racist gunman in the
western city of Hanau and a knife attack by a Syrian man on a gay
couple in Dresden in which one person was killed, Seehofer said.
German prosecutors said on Tuesday they had arrested a man accused
of sending hate mail to public figures using the acronym of a
neo-Nazi gang held responsible for murdering 10 people, prosecutors
said on Tuesday.
The 53-year-old suspect, who was arrested during a search of his
apartment in Berlin, is accused of sending threats and hate messages
over a three-year period to leftist national and regional
politicians as well as to a Turkish-German lawyer who represented
victims of far-right crimes.
The suspect signed his letters with the acronym "NSU 2.0,"
prosecutors said, a reference to the National Socialist Underground
(NSU) group blamed for the killings of eight Turks, a Greek and a
German policewoman between 2000 and 2007.
(Reporting by Joseph Nasr; editing by John Stonestreet and Gareth
Jones)
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