German authorities to expand crackdown on far-right extremists

Violent right-wing extremists pose a growing threat to Germany’s democracy, security officials said, announcing a package of measures to crack down on groups spreading hate.

Police have identified 43 so-called right-wing “Gefährder,” or individuals intent on carrying out violent acts of terrorism, a number double the count from two years ago.

In addition to foreigners and Jews, politicians and supporters of a liberal refugee policy have become the target of right-wing extremists.

“Right-wing crimes endanger our democracy,” Holger Münch, head of the Federal Criminal Police, said in Berlin. “The situation is serious.”

Security authorities have long observed a rising violent right-wing scene numbering around 12,700 people.

According to a concept proposed to the Interior Ministry, security authorities want to comb the internet for signs of radicalization and to better understand right-wing groups.
The goal is to increase pressure on such groups and eventually outlaw them, including possibly the so-called “New Right” organisations such as the Identitarian Movement.

Security officials also want to establish a central office to combat hate crime on the internet. Under the proposal, internet and social media providers would be required to report to police criminal content that they are already required to delete under current legislation.

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