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POLITICS

Clashes erupt as far-right AfD states aim to govern Germany

Two police officers were hospitalised Saturday after clashes with hooded protesters outside the congress of Germany's far-right AfD, as the party met weeks after its record EU election result.

Clashes erupt as far-right AfD states aim to govern Germany
Police face demonstrators protesting against the party congress of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party in Essen. Photo: Volker Hartmann/AFP.

About 1,000 police were deployed in the western city of Essen, where demonstration organisers said 50,000 protestors marched towards the congress. The police have not yet provided figures.

“We want to govern, first in the east (of Germany), then in the west, then at federal level,” Tino Chrupalla, co-president of the Alternative for Germany (AfD), told around 600 delegates of the two-day meeting which start half an hour late due to street blockades.

Police said two officers, a man and a woman, had to be hospitalised following attacks by protestors.

“Unknown assailants kicked two police officers in the head” and continued to “hit them while they were on the ground”, said the police of North Westphalia, where Essen is located.

Doctors later established their injuries were not as serious as initially feared, said police.

Seven officers were also slightly injured in the clashes near the Grugahalle hall. The perpetrators fled the scene.

Police said earlier they had used pepper spray and batons in earlier clashes.

“Several disruptive violent actions occurred in the Ruettenscheld quarter. Demonstrators, some of them hooded, attacked security forces. Several arrests were made,” the police of North Westphalia, where Essen is located, said on X, formerly Twitter.

A top regional official had warned that “potentially violent far-left troublemakers” could be among the protesters.

The total number of officers injured Saturday was 28, said police, adding that several people had been arrested.

‘Here to stay’

In early June the Alternative for Germany (AfD) notched up its best European Union election result since its creation in 2013, winning 16 percent of the vote to take second place.

Chrupalla praised party progress at a local level and its strong European Union election result.

It was behind the main conservative CDU-CSU opposition bloc but ahead of Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s Social Democrats (SPD), which is in power at the head of a troubled three-party coalition.

The AfD congress comes ahead of three key elections in September in states that once formed part of communist East Germany, and where the AfD has been topping opinion polls.

“We are here and we will stay,” said party co-president Alice Weidel, opening the congress and drawing sustained applause.

Both Weidel and Chrupalla were re-elected to lead the party for another two years.

“We have the right like all political parties — to hold a congress,” she added.

Buoyed by a surge in immigration and a weak performance by Europe’s top economy, the party hit as high as 22 percent in opinion polls in January.

However their support faltered amid a welter of scandals that mainly implicated their top EU election candidate, Maximilian Krah.

Tainted EU candidate

“I believe that the party has learnt a lot in recent months and will be very careful when we put forward leading candidates in the future,” Weidel told the Politico news outlet Thursday.

Krah initially faced allegations of suspicious links to Russia and China.

He then sparked widespread anger by telling an Italian newspaper that not every member of the Nazis’ notorious SS was “automatically a criminal”.

The comments prompted the AfD’s expulsion from its far-right group, Identity and Democracy (ID), in the European Parliament, in which France’s National Rally (RN) and Italy’s League had been its partners.

While the AfD has sought to shift the blame for all its recent woes onto Krah, there were signs of problems even before.

The RN had already distanced itself from the AfD after reports emerged in January that the German party had discussed the expulsion of immigrants and “non-assimilated” citizens at a meeting with extremists.

The reports caused shock in Germany and triggered weeks of mass protests.

Following the EU polls, the AfD ejected Krah from the delegation it sends to Brussels but the ID group does not seem ready to re-admit them, leaving the party searching for new partners.

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POLITICS

Germany’s first African-born MP says he won’t stand again

SPD politician Karamba Diaby, who championed the issue of dual nationality, said he will not run for the Bundestag again after the current legislative period comes to an end.

Germany's first African-born MP says he won't stand again

The Halle-based MP, Karamba Diaby, announced his decision in a letter sent to SPD colleagues, stating that he had given “months of consideration and deliberation” to the decision and had sought advice from his family.

“I can look back on 11 enriching and successful years in federal politics,” he wrote. After three legislative periods, however, “it’s time to explore new avenues and make space for the next generation.”

Diaby made history back in 2013 when he entered German parliament as the first African-born Black MP, and since then he has championed numerous issues relating to civil and migrant rights, including the issue of dual nationality.

Born in Senegal, Diaby moved to the former GDR as a student in the 1980s.

He thanked his party in his letter and highlighted past achievements such as the introduction of a statutory minimum wage, the Skilled Immigration Act and the modernisation of the citizenship law.

READ ALSO: How people with migrant backgrounds remain underrepresented in German politics

Most recently, he had campaigned for political initiatives to better integrate migrants from African countries.

However, his time in politics has been marred by repeated death threats and racist abuse.

In a notorious incident back in 2020, shots were fired at Diaby’s office in Halle by an unknown assailant. Around the same time the politician received written death threats. 

In 2023, a man who had repeatedly hurled racial slurs at Diaby committed an arson attack at his constituency office. 

‘A new level’

The SPD politician has repeatedly used his platform to highlight his experiences as a Black MP in Germany and speak out against discrimination, including the racism of the far-right AfD. 

Fire at Diaby constituency office

Burn marks following an arson attack at Karamba Diaby’s constituency office in Halle. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Heiko Rebsch

“Since 2017, the tone in the German Bundestag has become harsher,” Diaby recently told Politico’s Berlin Playbook Podcast. “We hear aggressive speeches from colleagues from the AfD. We hear derogatory and hurtful content in these speeches.”

The AfD’s racial insults have occasionally been hurled directly at Diaby: Markus Frohnmaier, an AfD MP from Baden-Württemberg, said in one Bundestag debate that the Halle MP “did not understand Central European customs”.

READ ALSO: Germany’s far-right AfD sees strong gains in local eastern elections

At the start of June this year, Diaby told followers on Instagram that both he and his staff had been subject to death threats once again.

“For me, the hatred and harassment has reached a new level,” he said.

However, Diaby made clear that his decision not to serve a further term in parliament was personal than political.

“I’ve been toying with the idea for a year, and after discussions with my family, it has matured,” he told left-wing newspaper Taz. “I want more time for my friends, family, and our allotment”. 

In a statement to the Mitteldeutsche Zeitung, however, Martin Kröber, a spokesperson for the SPD in Saxony-Anhalt, drew an explicit link between the harassment Diaby had faced and his decision to step down.

“I very much regret the decision, but I can understand it in view of the threats,” Kröber said. “The price Karamba Diaby paid for his political work was very high.”

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