Right-wing extremist demo near Leipzig Pride event broken up – DW – 17.08.2024

Right-wing extremist demo near Leipzig Pride event broken up – DW – 17.08.2024

Neo-Nazi activists held a short demonstration on Saturday in the vicinity of a Pride event in Leipzig, the second counter-demonstration of this kind within a week.

The march was organized to be within earshot of the 19,000-strong Pride Parade in support of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) community.

What happened during the right-wing extremist protests?

According to police, around 300 to 400 people took part in the rally of right-wing extremist politicians at the main train station. The motto was: “Proud, German, national.”

Several violations of the criminal code and the right of assembly were identified, the Saxon police wrote in a thread on X (formerly Twitter).

The participants of the right-wing extremist rally showed “behavior typical of a rally and in some cases aggressive or militant” upon their arrival, it said.

The neo-Nazi protest was broken up after a short time. Several hundred participants were temporarily taken into custody “in order to carry out all criminal procedural measures,” the Saxon police said.

The demonstrators were subjected to identity checks and searched for dangerous objects.

Right-wing extremists also gathered at the Bautzen Pride event in early August

Last Saturday, nearly 700 far-right demonstrators organized a march during a Pride rally in Bautzen, a city in the state of Saxony like Leipzig, which triggered a large police presence.

The counter-protest was entitled “Against gender propaganda and identity confusion!”

The small right-wing extremist party Free Saxony also held a protest rally.

The demonstrations took place without major incidents or arrests, police said.

Pride march attracts thousands

Up to 19,000 people came to the Pride rally in Leipzig on Saturday, police wrote on X. The demonstrators gathered on Augustusplatz, a large square in the east of the city.

High-ranking German politicians and leaders of the LGBT+ community showed their support, including Vice President of the Bundestag Katrin Göring-Eckardt and the Federal Government’s Queer Commissioner Sven Lehmann.

Known in Germany as Christopher Street Day, Pride rallies are held in several cities each year to commemorate the civil rights movement that began a decades-long process of improving LGBTQ rights.

In 1969, a civil rights uprising against police discrimination in New York took place in the gay bar Stonewall on Christopher Street.

The alliance “Leipzig shows attitude” had also registered several counter-demonstrations under the motto “No place for Nazis”.

Right-wing extremists also gathered at the Bautzen Pride event in early August

Last Saturday, nearly 700 far-right demonstrators organized a march during a Pride rally in Bautzen, a city in the state of Saxony like Leipzig, which triggered a large police presence.

The counter-protest was entitled “Against gender propaganda and identity confusion!”

The small right-wing extremist party Free Saxony also held a protest rally.

The demonstrations took place without major incidents or arrests, police said.

The rights of LGBTQ people are seen as being under threat from the rise of the far right, particularly in three eastern German states that will hold elections next month to elect their regional parliamentarians.

Why is the right-wing extremist AfD so powerful in East Germany?

To view this video, please enable JavaScript and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video.

The right-wing extremist Alternative for Germany (AfD) is expected to make significant gains in the state elections on September 1 in Thuringia and Saxony and on September 22 in Brandenburg.

Sahra Wagenknecht’s new far-left party, named after the populist MP and breakaway from the Left Party, will make its electoral debut and a good result is also expected.

mm/wd (dpa, epd)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *