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  • May 4, 2019 - Greding, Bavaria, Germany - Lawyer Dubravko Mandic looking at the camera outside of an event by the extreme-right flank of the AfD called ''der Fluegel''.  Mandic is now the subject of national attention for aggressively approaching journalists and filing criminal complaints against them. Die right-extremist flank of the Alternative for Germany party known as “der Fluegel” (“The Wing”) appeared in Greding, near Nuremburg in Bavaria.  Appearing with the group was Bjoern Hoecke, Benjamin Nolte, Bernhard Zimniok and Christina Baum.  Due to connections to the right-extremist spectrum and efforts against democracy, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Verfassungsschutz, Secret Service) escalated the group to preliminary monitoring ahead of possible formal monitoring. Participants, including right-radical Dubravko Mandic of the AfD in Freiburg aggressively approached and harassed journalists on the scene, with him taking the phone away of one.  Later, after calls to take the cameras from journalists, two attacked a journalist.  Mandic has posted about “the great exchange” referencing such theories by white supremacists who committed shootings, such as in Christ Church. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar/ZUMA Wire)
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  • May 4, 2019 - Greding, Bavaria, Germany - Die right-extremist flank of the Alternative for Germany party known as “der Fluegel” (“The Wing”) appeared in Greding, near Nuremburg in Bavaria.  Appearing with the group was Bjoern Hoecke, Benjamin Nolte, Bernhard Zimniok and Christina Baum.  Due to connections to the right-extremist spectrum and efforts against democracy, the Office for the Protection of the Constitution (Verfassungsschutz, Secret Service) escalated the group to preliminary monitoring ahead of possible formal monitoring. Participants, including right-radical Dubravko Mandic of the AfD in Freiburg aggressively approached and harassed journalists on the scene, with him taking the phone away of one.  Later, after calls to take the cameras from journalists, two attacked a journalist.  Mandic has posted about “the great exchange” referencing such theories by white supremacists who committed shootings, such as in Christ Church. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar/ZUMA Wire)
    20190504_zbp_b160_001.jpg
  • October 3, 2018 - Munich, Bavaria, Germany - Natascha Kohnen of the SPD.  Despite unstable weather, over 40,000 Bavarian citizens, politicians, and activists assembled at Munich’s famed Odeonsplatz to demonstrate against the Politik der Angst (politics of fear) in the last days before the Bavarian state elections.  The demonstration is the latest in a series of demonstrations protesting against the Polizeiaufgabengesetz (Police Assignment Laws) which critics maintain are undemocratic power grabs by the CSU party and police and designed to limit civil rights and press freedom.  Under these laws, anyone may be detained, without charge, indefinitely.  The CSU maintains these laws will save lives.  Furthermore, the groups also are protesting against increasingly racist and xenophobic CSU and AfD politics directed not only at refugees, but at foreigners and non-whites in Germany.  It is expected that the CSU will lose their absolute majority in the Bavarian Landtag, which will be made up by them likely assembling a coalition with the extreme-right Alternativ fuer Deutschland party. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar/ZUMA Wire)
    20181003_zbp_b160_001.jpg
  • September 29, 2018 - Garmisch Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany - EDL founder TOMMY ROBINSON with Austrian right-extremist and head of the Identitaeren Movement MARTIN SELLNER and Pegida founder LUTZ BACHMANN.  Sellner is also associated with white supremacists in the United States and Canada. Adding themselves to the “who’s who” list of of several hundred right-extremists from Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and other countries, Tommy Robinson, founder of the British EDL, Lutz Bachmann, grounder of Germany’s Pegida, and Martin Sellner of the Identitaere Bewegung were guests as the Compact Konferenz held in the international tourist town of Garmisch Partenkirchen in southern Bavaria.  The conferences are held by Juergen Elsaesser, founder of Compact magazine, a publication designed for right-extremists, conspiracy theorists, and right-wing sovereign citizens (Reichsbuerger).  The venue was the ironically-named Gasthof zum Rassen, which residents state has hosted numerous, unwanted far-right and right-extreme events in the village.  The city government is furthermore relatively quiet about such events, as stated by residents “they are afraid tourists will find out”.  Despite this, a spontaneous demonstration by residents took place. (Credit Image: © Sachelle Babbar/ZUMA Wire)
    20180929_zbp_b160_001.jpg