Fears of 'second Chemnitz' as Afghans held over German man's death
Around 2,500 people marched in a far-right demonstration in eastern
Germany Sunday after a man died following a fight with two Afghans, as
officials pleaded for calm to avoid the anti-foreigner unrest that has
shaken Chemnitz.
Local police and prosecutors said the 22-year-old victim had suffered
acute heart failure after coming to blows with the Afghan suspects
during a dispute on a playground in the town of Koethen late Saturday.
The German man's death was "not directly" linked to the injuries
suffered in the brawl, they said in a statement, and media reports said
he died in hospital and that he had a pre-existing heart condition.
Prosecutors said one of the Afghan suspects, aged 18, stands accused of
causing grievous bodily harm. The other, aged 20, faces charges of
causing bodily harm with fatal consequences.
The incident was expected to inflame anti-migrant tensions, coming just
two weeks after the fatal stabbing of a 35-year-old German man in the
city of Chemnitz, allegedly by two asylum seekers.
"With emotions running high, we have to resist any attempt to turn
Koethen into a second Chemnitz," the state premier of Saxony-Anhalt,
Reiner Haseloff, told DPA news agency.
Chemnitz, also located in Germany's former Communist east, has been
rocked by a series of far-right demonstrations that saw participants
assault foreign-looking people and shout anti-immigration slurs while
some flashed the illegal Nazi salute.
Immediately after news of the latest incident broke, right-wing groups
called on social media for a "mourning march" in Koethen from 7:00 pm
(1700 GMT).
Police estimated the turnout at some 2,500 people, and reported no major
disturbances. Many of the demonstrators waved the German flag and
shouted "Resistance! Resistance!".
A counter-demo by far-left protesters at Koethen's rail station drew 200 people, according to police.
- 'Keep calm' -
Mayor Bernd Hauschild, in a Facebook message, urged locals to shun the
right-wing demo because he had "information that people prepared to use
violence were planning to travel to Koethen in large numbers".
Bild newspaper said around 100 federal police officers had been sent to
Koethen to help keep the peace, after police were criticised for
underestimating the scale of the Chemnitz demostrations.
According to local media the latest incident started when three Afghan
men were arguing with a pregnant woman over who was the father of her
unborn child.
Two German men then approached the group and the row escalated into a brawl.
The third Afghan was not arrested as he was not believed to have been involved in the fighting.
Local residents and politicians on Sunday placed flowers and candles at the scene.
State interior minister Holger Stahlknecht said on Twitter that he
deeply regretted "the tragic death" and understood citizens' concerns.
But he urged residents to "keep calm" and let justice run its course.
- 'Reprehensible' -
The recent unrest in Chemnitz in neighbouring Saxony has reignited
debate in Germany about Chancellor Angela Merkel's 2015 decision to open
the country's borders at the height of Europe's migrant crisis.
More than a million asylum seekers have arrived since then, deeply
dividing Germans and fuelling the rise of the far-right Alternative for
Germany (AfD) party.
Merkel has strongly condemned the angry mobs in Chemnitz, saying there was no place for "hate in the streets".
But interior minister Horst Seehofer of her CSU sister party, and one of
Merkel's fiercest critics, responded by blasting immigration as "the
mother of all political problems".
It also emerged at the weekend that a Jewish restaurant was attacked on the sidelines of the Chemnitz protests on August 27.
The owner told AFP that around a dozen masked neo-Nazis shouted: "Jewish
pig, get out of Germany!" and hurled rocks, bottles and a metal pipe at
the Schalom restaurant.
The head of the New York-based World Jewish Congress slammed the "reprehensible" attack.
"It is inconceivable and outrageous that neo-Nazi elements or
Nazi-inspired individuals in Germany continue to feel empowered to
engage in violent acts against Jews and other minorities," Ronald Lauder
said.
Seehofer told public broadcaster ARD on Sunday that Germany faced three
big challenges: growing right-wing radicalism, "worrying" anti-Semitism
and violent crimes committed by foreigners.
"We aren't blind to any of this," Seehofer said.
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