Thousands at far-right rally against Merkel migrant policy
Leipzig (Germany) (AFP) - Thousands of far-right protesters
rallied in the eastern German city of Leipzig Monday against the record refugee
influx they blamed for sexual violence against women at New Year's Eve
festivities. The crowd loudly vented its anger at Chancellor Angela
Merkel, whom they accuse of destroying their homeland by allowing in 1.1
million asylum seekers last year.
"We are the people", "Resistance!" and
"Deport them!", chanted the followers of LEGIDA, the local chapter of
xenophobic group PEGIDA, the "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation
of the Occident".
A heavy police presence, with water canon at the ready, kept
watch over the crowd of several thousand, and separated them from thousands of
counter-demonstrators, as rain poured down.
While the rally stayed peaceful, police said some 250
far-right hooligans had thrown rocks and smashed shop windows in a
traditionally left-wing student district of the city, before police dispersed
them.
The key theme of the LEGIDA protest was the New Year's Eve
attacks in the western city of Cologne, where hundreds of women reported being
groped and robbed by men described as Arabs and North Africans, in scenes that
have shocked the country.
Justice Minister Heiko Maas earlier Monday warned that
"those who now hound refugees -- on the Internet or on the streets -- have
obviously just been waiting for the events of Cologne" and were now
"shamelessly exploiting" the attacks.
"Refugees not welcome!" read one sign, showing a
silhouette of three men armed with knives pursuing a woman, while another
declared "Islam = terror".
"Since New Year's Eve, nothing is like it was,"
said one speaker, PEGIDA activist Tatjana Festerling, who decried the night's
"sex jihad against women".
"Asylum-Mummy Merkel had barely delivered her New
Year's address to the people when in Cologne the first fireworks hit the
cathedral and police," she said.
"Then these Muslim refugees started their wholesale
terror attack against German women, against blonde, white women," she said
to loud boos from the crowd.
Waving a sign declaring "State of injustice",
44-year-old demonstrator Lukas Richter said "Merkel is breaching the
constitution and must go," and that "the government must close the
borders and return all illegal migrants".
He charged that the New Year's Eve attacks highlighted
"the violence of foreigners in Germany that has existed for years".
One sign mocked Merkel's "We can do it" motto on
the refugee influx, saying "You can't even secure a train station".
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