Germany puts far-right AfD party under
surveillance
Issued on:
04/03/2021 - 04:39
https://www.france24.com/en/europe/20210304-germany-puts-far-right-afd-party-under-surveillance
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NEWS WIRES
Germany’s
domestic security agency has placed the far-right AfD under surveillance for
posing a threat to democracy, parliamentary sources said Wednesday, dealing a
blow to the anti-immigration party in a big election year.
The Federal
Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) has classified the
Alternative for Germany (AfD) party as a “suspected case” of having ties to
right-wing extremism, the sources told AFP.
The
decision, made late last week according to a report in Der Spiegel weekly, will
allow intelligence agents to shadow the party, tap its communications and
possibly use undercover informants.
It follows
a two-year investigation and a report containing some 1,000 pages of evidence,
including several hundred speeches and statements by AfD members at all party
levels, Der Spiegel said.
However,
lawmakers as well as candidates standing in September’s general election will
be excluded from the monitoring, said the parliamentary sources, noting that
such surveillance would require even more stringent justifications.
The BfV
said it was unable to comment on the case in view of pre-emptive urgent
proceedings filed by the AfD against the agency’s bid to class it as a
“suspected case”.
One of the
heads of the party, Alexander Gauland, accused the BfV of playing politics and
trying to bring about the “destruction” of the AfD.
The party
would not be “pandering” to the agency, he told reporters, drawing comparisons
to state security in the former East Germany.
Fellow
co-leader Alice Weidel told the DPA news agency the AfD would take legal action
against the decision, which she called “particularly remarkable in view of the
upcoming state and federal elections this year”.
‘Bird poo’
The
anti-Islam, hard-right AfD has often courted controversy by calling for Germany
to stop atoning for its World War II crimes. Gauland once described the Nazi
era as just “a speck of bird poo” on German history.
Starting
out at as an anti-euro outfit in 2013, the AfD capitalised on public anger over
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s 2015 decision to allow in a wave of asylum seekers
from conflict-torn countries like Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq.
The AfD
took nearly 13 percent of the vote in the 2017 general election, allowing it to
make its debut in the German Bundestag where it is also the biggest opposition
party.
But with
the migrant influx waning and with the coronavirus pandemic roiling Germany,
the AfD has seen its popularity fall while Merkel’s handling of the health
crisis has won her plaudits.
The AfD
faces six regional elections this year and a general election on September 26,
the first in over 15 years that will not feature Merkel, who is retiring from
politics.
Latest
surveys show the party’s popularity at between 9 and 11 percent.
The BfV had
already placed a radical fringe of the party known as The Wing under
surveillance last year over associations with known neo-Nazis and suspicions of
violating the constitution.
The
faction, led by firebrand Bjoern Hoecke, dissolved itself last March but many
of its 7,000 members remain active in the AfD.
The Wing’s
continued influence in the party was one of the reasons for the BfV decision,
according to Der Spiegel, along with links to various other right-wing
extremist organisations.
The AfD’s
regional branches in Thuringia, Brandenburg, Saxony and Saxony-Anhalt have also
been designated as “suspected cases” of right-wing extremism.
The head of
Germany’s Central Council of Jews, Josef Schuster, welcomed the classification
as a “right and necessary step”.
“With its
destructive politics, the AfD contributes to undermining our democratic
structures and to discrediting democracy,” he said.
But the
decision to place the party under surveillance could in fact boost the AfD’s
chances in upcoming elections, according to the RND broadcaster.
The
classification could serve as “a distinction in the fight against the ‘Merkel
system’”, it said, suggesting the BfV could be playing “a very dangerous game”.
(AFP)
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