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Hand in hand - hundreds of thousands at demonstrations against the right

2024-02-03T16:30:11.071Z

Highlights: At least 200,000 people at three large demonstrations in Berlin, Freiburg and Augsburg alone. The organizers, an alliance called Hand in Hand, even spoke of 300,000 participants. The trigger was research by the media company Correctiv into a meeting between radical right-wingers and individual politicians in Potsdam in November. Protester: “I think we have kept our mouths shut for too long” and “Racism causes significant harm to you and the people around you"



As of: February 3, 2024, 5:17 p.m

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Numerous people take part in the demonstration of an alliance “We are the firewall” for democracy and against right-wing extremism with posters.

© Kay Nietfeld/dpa

Mass protests against the right have been going on for weeks now.

There were at least 200,000 people at three large demonstrations in Berlin, Freiburg and Augsburg alone.

What drives them.

Berlin - Complete strangers hold hands and hold them up.

“We are the human firewall,” a voice echoes from the stage.

According to police reports, more than 150,000 people gathered in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin on Saturday afternoon.

For democracy and tolerance, against right-wing, hatred and the AfD.

The organizers, an alliance called Hand in Hand, even spoke of 300,000 participants.

They had registered a third of them.

In several other cities there were once again an unusually large number of people taking to the streets on Saturday: around 30,000 in Freiburg, around 25,000 in Augsburg, around 10,000 in Krefeld, according to police figures.

There are also other demos across the country, some with four-digit numbers of participants.

For a good three weeks, tens of thousands of people have been taking to the streets all over Germany against the right and the AfD.

The trigger was research by the media company Correctiv into a meeting between radical right-wingers and individual politicians from the AfD, CDU and Values ​​Union in Potsdam in November.

There, the former head of the right-wing extremist Identitarian Movement in Austria, Martin Sellner, said he spoke about the concept of so-called remigration.

When right-wing extremists use the term, they usually mean that large numbers of people of foreign origin should leave the country - even under duress.

Protester: Shut up for too long

Berliner Claudia Kirchert, who came to the Reichstag building with her daughter, was shocked by the results of this research.

The 49-year-old talks about doing something about the feeling of powerlessness by participating in the large group.

“I probably wouldn't have gone to such a big demonstration a year ago.” The hope now: The AfD and right-wing populists are signaling that there is a counterweight.

Protester Patrick Stein argues similarly: “I think we have kept our mouths shut for too long.” He has a sign in the style of cigarette pack warnings: “Racism causes significant harm to you and the people around you.”

As the crowd chants “All of Berlin hates the AfD,” a moderator has a different idea: “All of Berlin is stopping the AfD,” he says, and the crowd applauds and joins in.

Many young people, some with migrant backgrounds, speak on stage.

There are also many middle-aged, middle-class people in the crowd, braving the rain, which initially just drizzles and later becomes heavier.

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Hand in hand - for democracy and against right-wing extremism.

© Christophe Gateau/dpa

You can see colorful flags, gray-haired people with signs against deportations, people dancing, and several families with children.

And also some who see themselves as victims of right-wing extremist fantasies: “I’m gay.

I would certainly be one of the groups that would be discriminated against by this right-wing radical mob,” says 59-year-old Armin Dötsch, who was one of the first on site in the morning wearing a red jacket and carrying signs from the SoVD social association.

He also emphasizes that the social glue of society must be maintained and improved.

Serkan Bingöl came with a group of refugees, four or five young men standing around him.

The 36-year-old is a Berliner with a German passport and a high school teacher.

He says: “We want to send a signal for solidarity and that we are against discrimination.

And that we think it would be nice if a society with diversity instead of simplicity continues to exist in Germany.”

Hope for the social impact of the demos

Several of the people surveyed that day expressed a lack of understanding towards people who see the AfD as a solution to their dissatisfaction.

A sign sums it up like this: “If the AfD is the answer, then how stupid was the question?” 27-year-old Stefan Morlock hopes that the demos will have a more than symbolic effect on society and politics: “The action shows on the one hand in the elections, but also in everyday life.

That you stand up for the weaker people in society.”

According to the police, around 25,000 people demonstrated against right-wing extremism in Augsburg.

© Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa

Several speakers called on the democratic parties to oppose the shift to the right and to counter right-wing demands and narratives.

According to the speech manuscript, Luisa Neubauer, face of the German climate movement, said: You cannot shout “Peace, joy, democracy for all” at the demonstration in one day and then return to parliament and bring deeply right-wing words, language and politics into the democratic center.

“That doesn’t work.”

According to the police, more than 100,000 demonstrators came to Berlin's government district on January 21st.

The Bundestag, which has been based in the converted historic Reichstag building since 1999, is the central symbol of German democracy.

Demonstration for democracy and against right-wing extremism in front of the Reichstag building in Berlin.

© Kay Nietfeld/dpa

Chancellor Olaf Scholz has already assessed the numerous planned anti-right demonstrations this weekend as a “strong sign” for democracy and the Basic Law.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2024-02-03

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