Tue. Nov 5th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser has vowed to fight a surge in violence against politicians after a German member of the European Parliament had to be taken to hospital after being attacked while campaigning for re-election on Friday.

Matthias Ecke, 41, a member of Ms Faeser’s Social Democrats (SPD), was hit and kicked by a group of four people while putting up posters in Dresden, capital of the eastern state of Saxony, police said.

An SPD source said his injuries would require an operation.

Shortly beforehand, what appeared to be the same group attacked a 28-year-old campaigner for the Greens, who was also putting up posters, police said, although his injuries were not as serious.

“The constitutional state must and will respond to this with tough action and further protective measures for the democratic forces in our country,” Ms Faeser said in a statement, saying the attack on Mr Ecke was also an “attack on democracy”.

European Parliament President Roberta Metsola was one of many European politicians to sympathise with Mr Ecke, saying in a post on X that she was “horrified by the vicious attack”.

People look through a fence as Maximilian Krah, a member of the European Parliament for the far-right Alternative for Germany, attends a local election campaign rally in Dresden, Germany, on May 1, 2024.
Posters at an Alternative for Germany (AfD) rally on Wednesday read “Protect women and girls” and “End the asylum chaos”.(Reuters: Matthias Rietschel)

Nationwide, the number of attacks on politicians of parties represented in parliament has doubled since 2019, according to government figures published in January.

Ms Faeser said the verbal hostility of extremists and populists towards democratic politicians was partly responsible for the rise in violence.

Source link