Neo-Nazis join quiet march to poll victory
THERE was not a skinhead to be seen in this Baltic town at the heart of Germany’s neoNazi revival. No thugs with steel-tipped paratroop boots, no ranting xenophobes.
Yet the signs are clear: the far Right is on the march in Eastern Germany.
The neo-Nazis, picking up an astonishing level of support on the home turf of Angela Merkel, the Chancellor, look set to win a big chunk of seats in regional elections on Sunday. And to make sure that middleclass voters do not panic ahead of the ballot, they have donned camouflage.
“What did you expect,” asked Michael Andrejewski, the new face of the extreme Right. “That I would beat your brains out with a baseball bat?” Blinking from behind gold-framed glasses, Herr Andrejewski looked as threatening as a maths teacher — unlike the five young men who formed a protective semicircle around their leader. “You’ll be wanting to move along,” said one of them with menacing politeness. One quickly got the point. The slogan on his T-shirt read: “Granddad was right”.
According to the latest opinion polls the NPD, the National Party of Germany, is poised to win between 4.8 per cent and 7 per cent of the vote this weekend in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, the lush flatland that borders the Baltic Sea.
Since most Germans are afraid of admitting that they intend to vote for neo-Nazis, the betting is that the party will easily win the 5 per cent needed to capture parliamentary seats. It will be the second region, after Saxony, to have neo-Nazi members of parliament — a slap in the face for Frau Merkel, whose political constituency is in Mecklenburg.
Young Germans are leaving the area in droves in search of work. In East German days there were more than 20,000 people in Anklam, mainly fishermen and factory workers. Now there are barely 15,000. “It was the Leftists that got out,” says Herr Andrejewski, 47, who is likely to become a regional MP. “But our people stayed.”
That is only part of an extraordinary story — the economic transformation of the far Right. In Anklam and neighbouring Baltic villages ultranationalists own internet cafes and drink delivery services. They run music shops that are stacked with far Right rock bands. “There is a whole network of right-wing-run companies, above all in the local building business,” says Günther Hoffmann, who set up an association in Anklam to monitor the rise of the neo-Nazis. Small hotels are being bought up. A giveaway paper called The Island Messenger is edited and published by the extreme Right and is widely read.
This economic power — in a region where unemployment is more than 20 per cent — has translated into political clout. Firms in right-wing hands hire right-wing sympathisers as apprentices. Slowly but surely, neo-Nazis have become an indispensable part of society in northeast Germany. They sponsor sports competitions and dance evenings. The baker offers loaves with smooth brown crusts called glatze, the German for skinhead. There is no niche of society here that has not been infiltrated.
“It began with Blood & Honour rock concerts in the 1990s,” says Benedikt, a middle-aged computer specialist who did not want to be photographed, “and we thought it would go away when the teenagers grew up. But now they bring their children [to meetings] and marry each other.”
One proud neo-Nazi father gave his daughter a black doll for her third birthday — and a bat to beat it with.
The structural change came when the skinheads from the so-called Kameradschaften — disciplined, potentially violent gangs — decided to go mainstream and join the NPD about five years ago.
The posters that deck out every street corner say things like “Tourists welcome — asylum seekers out,” or depict a fist under the slogan “Enough!”
The NPD, which had been shipping tonnes of pamphlets in from its publishing houses across the country, is squeezing out the other parties. The Christian Democrats of Chancellor Merkel — in power in Berlin but not in Mecklenburg, have become almost invisible.
It is the likes of Herr Andrejewski who understand the mechanics of turning public frustration into a political weapon. He is not a maths teacher but a lawyer, and is using his legal skills to set up an advisory office for those on social welfare — the NPD intends to flood employment offices with official complaints and paralyse their work. The worse it gets for Mecklenburg, the better the far Right can present itself as the answer for those seeking social justice.
As for Hitler and the Nazi era, Herr Andrejewski would rather not comment. “Statements on this subject can drop you in legal hot water,” he said with just the flicker of a smile.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-2358390,00.html
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Germany's neo-Nazi National Democratic Party is set to make strong gains in an eastern state election on Sept. 17. Nationwide, far-right extremists remain marginalized, but the NPD's regional successes are an embarrassment to Germany and a warning that xenophobia is rife in the economically depressed east.
NPD supporters during a demonstration in the western city of Gelsenkirchen in June.
This weekend could be potentially embarrassing for Germany and Chancellor Angela Merkel, as voters go to the polls in two state elections.
Opinion polls indicate the neo-Nazi National Democratic Party (NPD) will get 6 percent or 7 percent, above the minimum 5 percent needed to enter the state assembly in Merkel's home state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, a rural region known chiefly for its beautiful Baltic Sea coastline.
It isn't expected to get enough votes to enter the state assembly in Berlin, which is also holding a regional election on Sunday. But in both states, the NPD and its supporters have been accused of intimidating opponents and disrupting their campaign events.
The NPD -- a xenophobic populist outfit with no substantial support nationally in Germany -- has declared solidarity with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after he questioned the Holocaust and said Israel should be wiped off the map. But it made international headlines in 2004 when voters elected it into the regional parliament in Saxony, another eastern state, with 9.2 percent.
The NPD and another far-right party, the German People's Union (DVU), are now represented in two of Germany's five former communist eastern states, an embarrassment to the country which has spent decades atoning for the Holocaust. Marginalized in federal politics, the German far right has begun building support at the regional and state levels.
"The NPD is well organized and is tapping into people's feelings that they have lost out as a result of unification," said Manfred Güllner, director of the Forsa polling institute. Unemployment in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany's most sparsely populated state, is 18.2 percent, the highest among the country's 16 states, and far above the national rate of 10.5 percent.
Like all other parties, the NPD receives state funding because it is a legal party. An attempt to ban it failed in 2002 when Germany's Supreme Court rejected the case because some of the NPD members accused of stoking racism turned out to be informants for the intelligence service.
Intimidation
The NPD has denied reports that its supporters have been intimidating campaigners from the center-left Social Democrats (SPD) and the left-wing PDS. "The opinion poll results appear to be unsettling the media cartel and the mainstream parties to such an extent that they can only resort to lies," Udo Pastörs, the NPD's leading candidate in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, said.
Sympathizing with Iran: the Iranian and NPD flags on sale during an NPD summer festival in Regensburg, Bavaria, in June.
But a spokeswoman for the state's interior ministry said: "There have been cases where campaigners from other parties felt threatened and two cases in August where police complaints were filed." Far-right attacks on foreigners and political opponents in the state rose to 28 last year from 21, according to the regional intelligence service.
Margret Seemann, a member of the state assembly for the SPD, said NPD supporters had surrounded her campaign stall in the town of Hagenow on August 18 and behaved in a threatening manner.
"One NPD supporter took photos of everyone who came up to speak to us. Another one approached the stall and said: 'When we get into power you Socialists will disappear,'" she told Bild am Sonntag newspaper. Pastörs then showed up with several bodyguards and surrounded the stand, said Seemann. They only left when the police arrived.
"Photographing people is a subtle means of blackmail and aggression. The message is 'watch out, we've got our eye on you, we may hurt you,'" said Professor Hajo Funke of Berlin's Free University, an analyst of far-right trends.
"They are ideologically hard core and pro violence. They need violence to establish the Fourth Reich, which is their aim," Funke said.
Campaigners in Berlin have also been complaining about intimidation and violence by far-right supporters. Last Friday a 23-year-old SPD worker was beaten up by two suspected far-right supporters as he was putting up campaign posters.
Feeding off discontent in the east
The far right has done well in the east because acceptance of democracy among ordinary people there is still weak after decades of communist rule, say analysts. The failure of the mainstream parties to cope with the mass unemployment and social upheaval after unification had made people more receptive to the radical right, Funke said. "Many people have the feeling that they're superfluous."
Udo Pastörs, the NPD's leading candidate in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania.
Their anger has provided fertile ground for the NPD, especially among young people, said Funke. Xenophobia is widespread because immigrants have become scapegoats for economic woes. There is little awareness of the Holocaust because Germany's Nazi past wasn't addressed under the communist regime. "In their racist aggression they think 'we finished them off, that's cool,'" Funke said.
The NPD has been targeting youths by distributing leaflets and CDs of far-right rock music outside schools, and organizing youth activities such as children's festivals and barbecues. Its campaigners have also taken to wearing smarter clothes rather than the aggressive combat-booted look that deterred voters.
SPD State premier of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Harald Ringstorff said: "The NPD had changed its strategy. It hid itself like a wolf in sheep's clothing...But it has been showing its true face in the campaign. It is resorting to pressure tactics including violence."
Professor Funke said the NPD's likely entry into the state assembly will cause outrage but be forgotten after a couple of months. "Nothing is being done to tackle the roots of the problem. People need to be educated. We can't wait till they all become Nazis."
Happy, Happy, Joy, Joy
Congratulations to our German comrades. Even this piece of jewspin crap can't hide the fact that the German people are finally coming together as one against the jew-controlled government.
I wonder if it is physically possible for one of these Jew/Jew lackies to write a political piece without using adjectives like "extreme right wing" "neo-nazi" "*xenophobic" etc., could their fingers touch the keys on a keyboard, & their brains allow these words note to be typed?
*that one is a pretty new, Jew manufacutred word, what it is suppose to mean, who knows?
Economically, things are really bad for Whites in this area of Germany (as it will be for Whites all over Germany) thanks to the jews forcing nonwhites into Germany who work for less than these Whites. Now these disenfranchised Whites are voting for the only party that will stand up for them politically, economically and racially. What part of this does not make perfect sense to anyone with even a quarter of a brain?
quote: One proud neo-Nazi father gave his daughter a black doll for her third birthday — and a bat to beat it with.]
the most extreme propaganda .
Who writes this shit? oh I forget, the same Jew that declared war in 1933 and even in WW1 the extreme propaganda, Germans allegedly cut-off baby hands and killed nuns ect.
^^ I say, that would've been pretty damn nice
The NPD must consist of a brave group of guys, what with all the anti-nazi/hate laws in Germany. I wish them 100% victory.
Your fathers, mothers, daughters, sons
Have been taken by the chosen ones
But don't you forget you made the choice,
You made your mark, you raised your voice,
They're all the same, you're all to blame
You're dogs!
Look and learn Kameraden. Hopefully soon we will have the chance to apply lessons learned from our brothers here.
Went to a parade for the Potato Bowl here today thick with system politicians. Some day we will kick them out of their convertibles and into their graves. :box:
HS marching bands are good representative sections of the population for demographic studies. My report: North Dakota still solidly Aryan, if disappointedly Lutheran. No niggers in Sons of Norways viking boat float.
With the Mex murderer of Dru Sjodin on trial for his life and recent mexican misbehavior, a racist bird decided to crap on the mexican in front of me. Who washed it off in the drinking fountain. Hope some of the young mothers in attendance with their thirsty childern noticed.
Wade
I enjoyed listening to you on FTL. I have go to get that Skype and join the conversation.
I think the NDP consist of mostly regular people with their backs to the wall.
Wade.