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CRIME

‘Anti-fascist’ mob rampages in Leipzig

A mass of 600 people stormed through central Leipzig on Thursday evening, attacking local government buildings, smashing shop windows, destroying police vehicles and spray painting anti-fasacist slogans along the way.

'Anti-fascist' mob rampages in Leipzig
Police line up participants in the violent outburst against a wall. Photo: DPA

Police reported that the group gathered at the state court and grew in numbers as they moved towards Augustusplatz, the largest square in the city.

Police later found large numbers of graffiti slogans including “it was murder” (possibly a reference to the violent death of an Eritrean asylum seeker in Dresden on Monday), “Stop Pegida”, “ANTIFA” (anti-fascists) and “stop deportations".

Along the route, members smashed storefronts, including a hairdresser and a bank, ripped up traffic signs from the pavement and threw them onto the street, and let off fireworks and smoke bombs.

When police patrol cars approached, hooded people began throwing rocks at them.

The mob continued towards Roßplatz, smashing more businesses, before moving to the city court where they smashed 40 windows.

Police reported that a large group were stopped when the group reached Karl-Liebknecht Straße. Only three were arrested, while officers recorded the details of the remaining 204.

Officers are investigating many of them for serious breach of the peace.

Three police cars were seriously damaged, including one which had all of its windows completely smashed.

A Leipzig police spokesman told The Local that his fellow officers were still accounting for all the damage done by the mob.

CLIMATE CRISIS

German police carry out nationwide raids against climate activists

German police on Wednesday carried out raids across seven states targeting climate activists of the "Letzte Generation" (Last Generation) group, which has sparked controversy with street blockades involving protesters glueing themselves to the asphalt.

German police carry out nationwide raids against climate activists

The raids were ordered in an investigation targeting seven people aged 22  to 38 over suspicions of “forming or supporting a criminal organisation”, said a joint statement by Bavaria’s police and prosecutors.

Fifteen properties were searched, two accounts seized and an asset freeze ordered.

The suspects are accused of “organising a donations campaign to finance further criminal acts” for the group via its website.

At least 1.4 million had been collected in the campaign, said the authorities, adding that “these funds were according to current information mostly used for the committing of further criminal action  of the association”.

The authorities did not specify the “criminal action” they were referring to but said two of the suspects are alleged to have tried to sabotage an oil pipeline between Trieste, Italy, and Ingolstadt, Germany, deemed a “critical  infrastructure” in Bavaria.

Dozens of climate activists from the group have found themselves before the courts in recent weeks over their traffic blockade actions.

READ ALSO: Munich airport forced to close runway due to climate protests

A Last Generation activist glues his hand to the street in Munich in November.

A Last Generation activist glues his hand to the street in Munich in November. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Lennart Preiss
‘Completely nuts’

Most have received fines for disrupting traffic or obstructing police work but some courts have begun toughening their sentences to also hand down jail convictions.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz and his coalition have also expressed frustration at the activists for their tactics ranging from hunger strikes to throwing mashed potato on paintings in museums.

Scholz this week blasted Letzte Generation’s protests as “completely nuts” and Vice Chancellor Robert Habeck of the Greens has also frowned upon the activists’ protests.

The street blockades were “not a helpful contribution to climate protection,” Habeck had said, because they don’t win consensus but they “irritate people”.

Scenes of angry motorists shouting at the glued activists or dragging them off the streets have accompanied many of the street blockades.

The activists argue however that their protests are vital in the face of inadequate action taken by the government and society in general to protect  the environment and prevent catastrophic global warming.

“We, who are alive today, are the last who can still hinder the irreversible collapse of the climate,” the group said.

Besides Letzte Generation, Germany has seen a host of other climate  activist groups carrying out eye-catching protests in the last years.

Another group, Scientist Rebellion, hurled cake at Volkswagen bosses at the German carmaker’s annual shareholders’ meeting earlier this month.

Outside the meeting, protests also gathered to put pressure on Europe’s  biggest car maker to slash its carbon footprint.

READ ALSO: Last Generation climate activists plan to bring Berlin to a ‘standstill’

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