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Germany denies entry to Spanish Falangist Isabel Peralta

2022-03-17T22:20:39.422Z


Federal police at Frankfurt airport found Nazi symbols in her suitcase and sent her back to Spain Isabel Peralta, from the far-right group Bastión Frontal, in an image from the video recorded at the tribute to the Blue Division at the Almudena cemetery in Madrid on February 13, 2021. German authorities have banned the entry into the country of a Spanish neo-Nazi who arrived at Frankfurt airport with a flag and a swastika keychain and a copy of Mein Kampf, the book Adolf Hitler wrote in prison


Isabel Peralta, from the far-right group Bastión Frontal, in an image from the video recorded at the tribute to the Blue Division at the Almudena cemetery in Madrid on February 13, 2021.

German authorities have banned the entry into the country of a Spanish neo-Nazi who arrived at Frankfurt airport with a flag and a swastika keychain and a copy of

Mein Kampf,

the book Adolf Hitler wrote in prison in 1925

,

in her suitcase .

.

The woman, named Isabel Peralta, who became known last year for a video in a tribute to the Blue Division in which she uttered anti-Semitic slogans, is linked to the extreme right-wing Front Bastion organization.

The German federal police sent her back to Spain.

As reported by

Der Spiegel

, Spanish authorities had previously warned their German colleagues that Peralta would arrive at Frankfurt airport, allegedly to participate in events organized by far-right groups in Germany.

This weekly ensures that the far-right "maintains close contacts" with these organizations, which in Germany are closely watched.

The federal police questioned Peralta at the airport after finding the material with Nazi symbols in his luggage.

The woman assured the agents that she has these objects because she is studying history and is interested in the Nazi era.

The German weekly is struck by the fact that Peralta usually "does the Hitler salute in public" and assures that since the video of her was released, she has become "an icon of the far-right scene throughout Europe."

Nazi symbols are prohibited in Germany.

Links with members of the German far right date back to at least the fall of 2021, the weekly reports, citing a trip to Germany where she was received by a group called III Wegs.

This organization is under surveillance by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the German internal secret services, which clearly considers it a right-wing extremist and has documented that it demonstrates against immigration and coronavirus restrictions.

Source: elparis

All news articles on 2022-03-17

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