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CRIME

Far-right motive suspected in German pro-migrant politician’s murder

German federal prosecutors said Monday they had taken over the murder case of a pro-migrant local city official, suggesting they suspect a far-right political motive.

Far-right motive suspected in German pro-migrant politician's murder
Walter Lübcke was shot to death at his home. Photo: DPA

Police commandos had on Saturday arrested a suspect in the June 2nd assassination-style shooting of Kassel city administration chief Walter Lübcke, 65, on the basis of DNA evidence.

“We have taken over the case,” said a spokeswoman of the federal prosecution service, which deals with crimes motivated by political and religious extremism.

READ ALSO: Political link suspected in German pro-migrant politician's murder

Authorities did not discuss the possible motive, but German media reported that the 45-year-old suspect from Kassel, Hesse state, had in the past been connected with far-right extremism.

Federal prosecutors assumed control of the investigation after “the suspicion of a right-wing extremist or right-wing terrorist background firmed up,” said the Süddeutsche Zeitung daily.

News site Zeit Online, citing unnamed security sources, partially named him as Stephan E. and said he had been previously sentenced to jail for a 1993 failed pipe-bomb attack on an asylum seekers' home in Hesse.

Three opposition parties – the Greens, Free Democrats and far-left Die Linke – urged a special parliamentary hearing into what could be Germany's first targeted killing of an elected official in decades.

Lübcke, a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative Christian Democrats, was shot in the head at close range overnight on the terrace of his home near Kassel, 160 kilometres northeast of Frankfurt.

He had passionately spoken out in defence of migrants at the height of Europe's 2015 refugee crisis, drawing the fury of the far right for telling anti-migrant agitators they “could leave Germany”.

Since his death, hundreds of posts from social media accounts tied to right-wing extremists have hailed his murder, in turn drawing strong condemnations from President Frank-Walter Steinmeier and other politicians.

Walter Lübcke's home where the murder happened. Photo: DPA

Racist hate

Der Spiegel weekly reported, without citing sources, that the suspect in custody had in the past had clear connections to the right-wing extremist scene and links to the neo-Nazi NPD party.

He had come to police attention for acts of violence as well as weapons and property offences, the magazine reported.

It said the suspect had received a seven-month suspended jail term a decade ago after he had joined right-wing radicals who attacked a May 1st Labour Day march in the western city of Dortmund.

If the shooting death was indeed motivated by right-wing extremism, it would be Germany's first political murder of an elected official in decades, recalling Britain's 2016 killing of British Labour Party lawmaker Jo Cox.

READ ALSO: Mourners gather in Hesse for funeral of murdered CDU politician

Several German politicians have been badly injured, among them parliamentary speaker Wolfgang Schäuble who has used a wheelchair since surviving a 1990 shooting by a deranged assailant, and Cologne city mayor Henriette Reker, who survived a 2015 knife assault by a man angered by her pro-refugee stance.

From the 1970s to early 1990s, Germany was terrorized by the far-left Red Army Faction, which emerged out of the anti-Vietnam war protest movement and launched a spate of shootings, bombings and kidnappings targeting politicians, police, bankers, business leaders and US troops.

More recently Germany was shocked to learn that the far-right militant group National Socialist Underground (NSU) killed nine Turkish and Greek-born immigrants and a German policewoman from 2000 to 2007, and carried out bomb attacks and bank robberies.

Free Democrats lawmaker Benjamin Strasser was among politicians sounding the alarm on Monday, telling media group RND that “for years, threats from the extreme right against politicians have been on the rise”.

“We need to decisively clear up and take effective measures against right-wing terrorist structures.”

By Frank Zeller

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POLITICS

Germany’s Scholz rejects calls for later retirement in Labour Day message

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) has rejected calls for later retirement in a video message for Labour Day published on Wednesday.

Germany's Scholz rejects calls for later retirement in Labour Day message

“For me, it is a question of decency not to deny those who have worked for a long time the retirement they deserve,” said Scholz.

Employees in Germany worked more hours in 2023 than ever before: “That’s why it annoys me when some people talk disparagingly about ‘Germany’s theme park’ – or when people call for raising the retirement age,” he said.

Scholz also warned of creating uncertainty due to new debates about the retirement age. “Younger people who are just starting out in their working lives also have the right to know how long they have to work,” he said.

Scholz did not explicitly say who the criticism was targeted at, but at its party conference last weekend, the coalition partner FDP called for the abolition of pensions at 63 for those with long-term insurance, angering its government partners SPD and the Greens.

Scholz saw the introduction of the minimum wage nine years ago – and its increase to twelve euros per hour by his government – as a “great success”. “The proportion of poorly paid jobs in our country has shrunk as a result,” he said.

READ ALSO: EXPLAINED: Is it worthwhile to set up a private pension plan in Germany?

However, he said there were still too many people “who work hard for too little money,” highlighting the additional support available through housing benefit, child allowance and the reduction of social security contributions for low earners.

“Good collective wage agreements also ensure that many employees finally have more money in their pockets again,” he added. 

And he said that the country wouldn’t “run out of work” in the coming years.

“On the contrary! We need more workers,” he said, explaining that that’s why his government is ensuring “that those who fled to us from Russia’s war in Ukraine get work more quickly.”

Work means “more than making money,” said Scholz. “Work also means: belonging, having colleagues, experiencing recognition and appreciation.”

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