Thousands gather in Germany to protest far-right AfD congress

Jan 12, 2025

World
Thousands gather in Germany to protest far-right AfD congress

Berlin [Germany], January 12: Thousands of protesters shouting "No to Nazis" gathered in the German town of Riesa, where the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party held a key convention approving co-leader Alice Weidel as candidate for chancellor in next month's snap election.
The meeting, which brought 600-odd delegates together on Saturday, eventually got under way two hours behind schedule after police cleared thousands of protesters mounting blockades in the AfD stronghold town, located in the eastern state of Saxony.
Protest organisers, who said 12,000 people from around the country turned up for the demonstration, said police hit groups of demonstrators and used pepper spray to disperse them.
Maria Schmidt, spokeswoman for the protest organisers, said: "Today we are protecting the right of people to live in safety without the fear of deportation or being attacked.
"We are all making it clear: Riesa is not a peaceful place for fascism," she said.
Police claimed about 8,000 demonstrators had assembled outside the town's convention centre. By late morning, a spokesman said there was "no serious unrest" but that one road on the way to Riesa remained blocked by protesters.
As the congress got under way inside the convention centre, Weidel congratulated her party colleagues for "defying the left-wing mob" while party co-leader Tino Chrupalla accused the demonstrators of acting like "anti-democrats and terrorists".
Source: Qatar Tribune