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NEO-NAZI

Swedes block Danish neo-Nazi extradition

Sweden's highest legal official Göran Lambertz has argued that a Danish neo-Nazi can not be extradited from Sweden to face charges in Germany as he has committed no crime under Swedish law.

A German prosecutor in Frankfurt am Man is investigating a distribution chain of so-called white power music with subsidiaries in several countries. The postal order network supplies hundreds of thousands of CDs with neo-Nazi, holocaust-denial and generally racist content. Some of this content has been distributed in Germany, in contravention of strict national laws.

The German authorities have sought judicial assistance and extradition of suspects from both Sweden and Denmark, but in Sweden they have met with opposition.

An underlying problem for the German prosecutor is that several of the offences that the man is suspected of are perfectly legal in Sweden.

These include the membership of a criminal organisation, the use of symbols such as the swastika and denial of the holocaust. Furthermore the hate crimes included in the charge list are barred by the statute of limitations.

Denmark has meanwhile been more cooperative and offered legal help to the German authorities and also approved the extradition of two leading figures within the Scandinavian arm of the neo-Nazi movement to Germany: Stefan Günther and Flemming Christiansen.

The case concerns a Danish citizen, resident in Sweden, who has distributed CDs manufactured in Australia. He has forwarded the material by post and by car.

The Swedish Chancellor of Justice Göran Lambertz has declined to provide legal assistance for the charges that relate to the posted items, as the CDs are to be considered to having been distributed in Sweden and are therefore protected by national law.

Lambertz has for the same reason rejected the extradition application.

Transporting the material by car is not however protected by Swedish law, but Lambertz does not consider the charges sufficient to warrant extradition. The offences have been, at least partially, committed in Sweden, and the period for prosecution has also for the most part expired.

NEO-NAZI

Spain probes anti-Semitic speech at ‘horrific’ neo-Nazi rally

Prosecutors in Madrid on Tuesday said they had opened an investigation into anti-Semitic comments made at a neo-Nazi rally held at the weekend which drew ire from Spain's Jewish community.

Spain probes anti-Semitic speech at 'horrific' neo-Nazi rally
File photo of a man making a fascist salute in Madrid. Photo: AFP

The incident took place Saturday when around 300 people gathered at La Almudena cemetery, with footage on social media showing several people in the crowd repeatedly giving the Nazi salute.

The rally, which was also attended by a Catholic priest, was a commemoration of the so-called “Blue Division”, a unit of Spanish military volunteers that fought for the Nazis during World War II.

At the cemetery, they laid flowers in front of the memorial to the fallen Blue Division soldiers.

During the rally, a young woman gave an inflammatory speech echoing rhetoric from the 1930s.   

The region's prosecutors confirmed they had opened “criminal investigation to gather information about the anti-Semitic statements” which could constitute an offence relating to the exercise of fundamental rights and public freedoms, according to a statement received by AFP.    

“It is unacceptable that such serious anti-Semitic manifestations go unpunished,” said Isaac Benzaquen, head of the Spanish Federation of Jewish Communities, indicating that a complaint had been filed.

Israel's ambassador to Spain, Rodica Radian-Gordon, also tweeted her condemnation, saying the statements were “repugnant and have no place in a democratic society”.

And the American Jewish Committee (AJC) described the rally as “horrific”, calling on the Spanish government on Twitter “to censure these groups endangering democracy”.

At least 200,000 Spanish Jews were forced into exile by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella in 1492. Known as Sephardim — the Hebrew term for Jews of Spanish origin — many fled to the Ottoman Empire or North Africa and later to Latin America.   

Today the Jewish community in Spain numbers around 40,000 people, community sources say.

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