Extremists admit beating Africans in German town, police say

By DPA

Mainz (Germany) : Two right-wing extremists have confessed to beating up two Africans in the west of Germany, police said Monday as investigations continued into other racist attacks.


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The pair was arrested on Friday after a Sudanese and an Egyptian were attacked after a wine festival in the village of Guntersblum, near the town of Mainz.

A police spokesman said the assailants admitted their involvement in the attack, which put the Sudanese in hospital for several days, but denied hitting him on the head with a bottle.

The incident occurred on the same evening as eight Indians were attacked and chased through the streets of Muegeln after a local festival in the town in Germany’s former communist east.

In another attack on Friday, a 36-year-old Iraqi was beaten with a baseball bat and racially abused by a man who set his dog on him at a tram stop in the eastern city of Magdeburg.

Police in the city said Monday they were looking for a suspected right-wing extremist in connection with the assault, but had so far not made any arrests.

In another incident Friday evening, a mob of about 40 young men went on the rampage at a fair in the eastern town of Buetzow, smashing stalls and pelting police with bottles.

Police said members of the local right-wing scene were involved in the rampage, which also targeted a snack bar operated by a Pakistani who has lived in the town since 2002.

“I was afraid for my life,” Mahmood Saqib told DPA Monday. The mob also shouted anti-Turkish slogans, said Saqib, who was in his flat above the premises at the time.

“We’ll come up and finish you off,” they yelled at him, he said.

The incidents rekindled calls for a ban on the extreme right-wing National Democratic Party (NPD), which is represented in the regional parliaments of two of the eastern states where the attacks occurred.

Leading German politicians have expressed doubts whether a ban could be imposed after a similar attempt was quashed by the country’s top court in 2003.

The deputy president of the European Commission, Franco Frattini, called for the banning of the NPD after the attack in Muegeln.

He said in an interview with the Bild am Sonntag newspaper on Sunday that neo-Nazis represented “a threat” and “an ulcerous cancer for democratic countries like Germany.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel condemned the attack in Muegeln as “extremely grim and shameful” and a government spokesman said it was harmful to Germany’s image abroad.

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