The
Reichstag is the “symbolic centre of our democracy”, the interior minister,
Horst Seehofer, told Bild. “It is unacceptable to see extremists and
troublemakers use it for their own ends.”
German leaders hit out at protesters’ attempt to
storm Reichstag
President condemns ‘attack on heart of our democracy’
during protest against Covid restrictions
Agence
France-Presse in Berlin
Sun 30 Aug
2020 15.44 BSTLast modified on Mon 31 Aug 2020 04.37 BST
German
leaders have condemned the “unacceptable” attempt by protesters to storm the
Reichstag building during a mass rally against coronavirus restrictions.
Some of the
protesters on Saturday carried the former imperial flag, which was used up
until the end of the first world war.
“Flags from
the Reich and far-right profanity in front of the German parliament are an
unacceptable attack on the heart of our democracy,” the German president,
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, said on Instagram. “We will never accept this.”
Police said
about 38,000 people, double the number expected, had gathered in Berlin to
protest against restrictions imposed to curb the spread of the coronavirus,
such as the wearing of masks and social distancing.
Late on
Saturday, several hundred people broke through barriers and a police cordon to
climb the steps leading to the entrance. They were narrowly prevented from
entering the building by police, who used pepper spray and arrested several
people.
Police
initially appeared overwhelmed, as only a handful of officers were there to
block the crowd.
“We cannot
be present everywhere and it is precisely these weaknesses in the deployment
that were exploited, in this case to cross the security barriers in order to
reach the steps of the Reichstag,” said a local police spokesman, Thilo
Cablitz.
The
Reichstag building, where German MPs meet, has a powerful symbolic role in the
country. The domed building was burned down by the Nazis in 1933 in an act
aimed at destroying what remained of German democracy between the two world
wars.
The
Reichstag is the “symbolic centre of our democracy”, the interior minister,
Horst Seehofer, told Bild. “It is unacceptable to see extremists and
troublemakers use it for their own ends.”
About 300
people were arrested in scuffles with police, in front of the Reichstag
building and also outside the nearby Russian embassy, where protesters pelted
police with bottles.
Berlin city
authorities had initially decided not to allow the Saturday demonstration to go
ahead, fearing the protesters would not socially distance or comply with face
mask requirements.
The ban
sparked outrage from organisers and their supporters who flooded social media
with angry messages vowing to protest anyway, with some even calling for
violence.
But on the
eve of the protest, Berlin’s administrative court sided with the demonstrators,
saying there was no indication organisers would “deliberately ignore” social
distancing rules and endanger public health.
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