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Call for minorities to unite against far-right mobs in Chemnitz

Jewish groups say they are 'very frightened' by developments in eastern Germany and beyond

September 4, 2018 10:06
PA-38225496

ByToby Axelrod, Toby Axelrod Berlin correspondent

2 min read

Last week’s violent anti-migrant demonstrations in the city of Chemnitz, triggered by the August 26 murder of a German man — allegedly by two migrants — revealed the dark underbelly of right-wing populism in Germany once again.

Hours after the murder of Daniel Hillig, far-right activists announced a demonstration aimed at showing who is in charge in Chemnitz, a city of a quarter million in the former East German state of Saxony.

Over two days, neo-Nazis harassed, chased and beat people on the streets they considered to be foreigners. Some videos also caught right-extremists attacking police.

Officers had to resort to using water cannon to subdue some rioters. Politicians across the mainstream spectrum expressed concern about the state’s failure to stop the violence sooner.