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Germany’s security will run surveillance on the far-right Alternative for Germany’s (AfD)

Mar 12, 2020 | Studies & Reports

Germany puts far-right AfD’s ‘Wing’ group under surveillance

European Centre for Counterterrorism and Intelligence Studies – ECCI

DW – The populist Alternative for Germany party has been accused of fueling far-right attacks with “extremist” rhetoric. Its most nationalistic “Wing” will be put under surveillance by German domestic intelligence.Germany’s domestic security agency will run surveillance on the far-right Alternative for Germany’s (AfD) most nationalistic group, the agency’s president announced on Thursday.

The step designates the AfD group known as the “Wing (“Flügel”) as a far-right extremist group warranting observation from security forces.”The Wing evidently has extremist intentions,” said Thomas Haldenwang, the president of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution — Germany’s domestic security agency.

The group in the AfD was identified as “suspicious” by the agency in January 2019 and was already being monitored, along with the far-right party’s youth branch.After the far-right attack in Hanau in February, in which 11 people lost their lives, the German government saw increased calls from people across the political spectrum to put the AfD under observation. A manifesto written by the perpetrator of the attack contained anti-migrant rhetoric that echoed AfD sentiments.

‘We cannot repeat the past’

Halberwang identified the 12 people who died in  right-wing extremist attacks in Germany in several attacks in the last 12 months.”Behind these figures there are innocent victims — and there are also those who are responsible, and those who supported them,” he told reporters.”We cannot repeat the past,” he said, explaining that a higher level of surveillance, especially in the digital world, could help unmask the supporters of extremism. He also referenced Germany’s murky past with far-right hate crimes.

“The digital world leads to a disinhibition,” he said. “If people can easily consume hate in the virtual world, they will begin to act with hate in the real world.”He identified several members of the AfD’s Wing, including the state of Thuringia’s regional party leader Björn Höcke, as “far-right extremists.”

AfD slams new surveillance measures

Ahead of the official announcement, several AfD politicians condemned the move, calling it a deliberate tactic to silence the party.”This is a politically motivated, anti-AfD convoluted act,” said Jörg Meuthen, spokesman for the AfD. The party has repeatedly said its activities are not unconstitutional and do not warrant observation. “The security agency has made a mistake with its allegations,” the party said in a statement on Wednesday.

Höcke, who is one of the Wing’s most prominent leaders, also spoke out against the decision ahead of the announcement. The Thuringian politician said his calls for the “de-Islamization of Germany and Europe” are “not directed against the freedom of religion anchored in the constitution.”

He said his frequent use of anti-Islam rhetoric did not call for “the collective expulsion of Muslims living in Germany, and certainly not of German citizens.”

European Centre for Counterterrorism and Intelligence Studies – ECCI

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