Category: Germany

With an estimated number of at least 2.1 million Turks in Germany, they form the largest ethnic minority. The vast majority are found in what used to be West Germany. Berlin, Frankfurt,Hamburg, Rhine-Ruhr (Cologne, Duisburg and Dortmund) have large Turkish communities. The state with the largest Turkish population is North Rhine-Westphalia.

  • 5th Intercultural Chess Tournament

    5th Intercultural Chess Tournament

     

    5th Intercultural Chess Tournament Satranç Club 2000

    It is already 50 years ago: On 30th October 1961, the Federal Republic of Germany and the Turkish Republic joined the agreement for the recruitment of labours. In remembrance to this anniversary, there has been many miscellaneous activities all over Germany. The intercultural Chess Club “Satranç Club 2000“ is very experienced in these kind of events, not least because they have already organized the tournament for the 40th anniversary 10 years ago. After this, they have organized many other intercultural chess events.

    PICT0065

    The Satranç Club has been founded in the year 2000 from turkish originated members and now, many other nations are part of the club. Hence the club is realising the FIDE motto “Gens una Sumus” (We are one family).

    On Tuesday, the 1st November 2011, the Club organized the 5th run of its consuetudinary Intercultural Rapid Chess Tournament, which became an inherent part of the cologne tournament calendar. The Turkish consul general, Mr. Mustafa Kemal Basa, donated additional material prizes for the tournament winners. In addition to this, a representative from the sociology faculty of the Cologne University joined the tournament location to collect information for the study “Migrants in Germany”.

    In the previous week, it was the first time that an active member of the Satranç Club, Mr. Sava Gavrilov, died. The tournament began with a minute’s silence in memory of him.

    At the end the tournament, the tournament leader Izzet Yilmaz announced the tournament result, which has been the closest run in this tournaments history:

    Ranking after final round:

    Pl. Name IRtg Team Pnts 1 1/2 0 Bhlz SoBe Kat

    1 Haskelman Eugen 2201 Ford-SF 5.50 5 1 1 32.00 23.75

    2 Johannes Alexander 2124 Satranç 5.50 5 1 1 30.00 23.00

    3 Peters Alex 2144 Brühler 5.50 4 3 0 27.50 21.50

    4 Goldenstein Arnd 1983 Klub Köl 5.50 5 1 1 27.50 19.75

    5 Münster Kirsten van 2109 KSK Dr. 5.00 4 2 1 34.50 23.75

    6 Krauth Alexander 2031 Klub Köl 5.00 4 2 1 30.00 20.50

    7 Philipp Stephan 1941 Fideler 5.00 4 2 1 29.50 18.75

    8 Schunk Thomas Dr. 2238 Ford-SF 5.00 4 2 1 27.00 18.50 S

    9 Eising Johannes 2115 SG Porz 5.00 4 2 1 27.00 18.00 S

    10 Perez-Lücke Eneida 1979 vereinsl 4.50 4 1 2 31.50 18.75

    11 Bub Volker 2094 SC Torna 4.50 4 1 2 29.50 16.75

    12 Langen Dirk 1784 Satranç 4.50 4 1 2 26.50 15.00

    13 Foth Stefan 0 vereinsl 4.50 3 1 2 26.00 13.50

    14 Mann Günter 1773 Bergisch 4.00 3 2 2 31.50 16.00 S

    15 Eilers Jochen 2007 Bergisch 4.00 3 2 2 31.00 15.75

    16 Werner Michael 1974 Düsseldo 4.00 3 2 2 30.00 14.50

    17 Jansen Kurt 1453 Sülz-Kle 4.00 3 2 2 28.50 14.75 S

    18 Selimi Burim 0 Satranç 4.00 4 0 3 27.50 13.50

    19 Kuhn Helmut 1564 SF Gerre 4.00 4 0 3 25.00 12.00

    20 Natzschka Holger 1660 vereinsl 4.00 4 0 3 24.50 10.00

    21 Heider Arno 1567 SG Kalke 4.00 2 4 1 23.50 11.75 S

    22 Reinartz Ulrich 1667 vereinsl 4.00 3 2 2 23.50 10.25 S

    23 Knütter Helmut 1632 Sülz-Kle 4.00 3 2 2 23.00 11.50 S

    24 Kronseder Michael 1432 Hürth-Be 4.00 4 0 3 21.50 8.00 S

    25 Duraku Sherif 0 Satranç 4.00 3 0 3 21.00 8.75

    26 Osta Muhammed Enes 1049 Satranç 4.00 4 0 3 18.50 7.00 J

    27 Meinhardt Günter 1669 SF Köln- 3.50 3 1 3 28.50 11.25 S

    28 Rieger Isabelle 1442 Fideler 3.50 3 1 3 25.00 10.75 J

    29 Röttgers Roland 1736 Fideler 3.50 3 1 3 25.00 10.50

    30 Runte Dirk 1576 Fideler 3.50 3 1 3 21.50 9.00

    31 Faethe Peter 0 vereinsl 3.00 3 0 4 29.50 11.00 S

    32 Aslan Nesimi 1451 Satranç 3.00 3 0 4 24.50 7.50

    33 Pohl Stefan 1379 Klub Köl 3.00 2 2 3 23.00 8.25 J

    34 Abbasov Amil 1472 Wittekin 3.00 2 2 3 23.00 7.00 J

    35 Brausewetter Jörg 1469 vereinsl 3.00 2 2 3 22.50 7.75 S

    36 Felsmann Helmut 1407 ISVF Eik 3.00 3 0 4 22.50 6.00

    37 Kämmerling Ulrich 0 vereinsl 3.00 1 4 2 22.00 8.25

    38 Baltic Fatih 1253 SV Lende 3.00 3 0 4 22.00 7.00 J

    39 Meier Franz 1452 Ford-SF 2.50 2 1 4 26.50 6.50 S

    40 Akpinar Abuzer 1418 Satranç 2.50 2 1 4 25.00 7.50

    41 Simsek Cem 0 Klub Köl 2.50 2 1 4 22.00 6.00 J

    42 Zengin Mehmet 0 Satranç 2.50 2 1 4 20.50 6.00

    43 Segura Cerveto Jose 0 Satranç 2.50 1 1 4 17.00 2.75

    44 Mehner Matthias 918 SF Köln- 2.50 2 1 4 14.50 2.00 S

    45 Azimi Reza 1410 Schachuz 2.00 2 0 5 21.00 2.00 S

    46 Schütz Samson 1151 Fideler 2.00 2 0 5 20.00 2.00 J

    47 Gosebrink Roland 0 vereinsl 2.00 1 0 5 19.00 2.25

    48 Abbasov Ümid 759 Wittekin 2.00 1 0 5 17.00 1.25 J

    49 Osta Ömer 0 Satranç 2.00 2 0 5 17.00 1.00 J

    50 Secen Seref 0 Satranç 1.00 0 0 6 19.00 0.25

    51 Bakirci Baris 0 vereinsl 1.00 0 0 6 14.50 0.25 J

    The tournament winner from 2008, IM Eugen Haskelman, won again. This time with a very slight advantage of 2 Buchholz points to the runner-up representative of the hosting club, Alexander Johannes and to the third Alex Peters. Dr. Thomas Schunk became the senior award and the always positive and upbeat 13 years old Muhammed Enes Osta (also a member from Satranç Club) became the most successful youth player.

    The president Güven Manay and the tournament leader Izzet Yilmaz presented the prices (cups, certificates and material prices) to the winners with many thanks to all organizers and helpers.

    One week later, the club hosted the Cologne preliminary competition to the German Chess cup (Dähnepokal), which has been won the first time from Alex Johannes, which means the first time from a member of the Satranç Club.

    The Satranç Club (Satranç is the Turkish word for chess) is open to chess companions from all nations, all strengths of play and age groups. The club is providing a pleasant and familiar ambience and is located in the center of cologne.

    You can contact the club here: satrancclub2000@gmx.de oder gmanay@gmx.de.

    Web page: www.satranc.de.vu

  • Is Turkey’s EU integration over?

    Is Turkey’s EU integration over?

    get article image
    German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his wife Emine attend a ceremony to celebrate 50 years of Turkish guest workers in Germany on November 2, 2011 in Berlin.

    By Salah Bayaziddi

    When Recep Tayyip Erdogan visited Berlin to mark the 50th anniversary of an agreement that brought Turkish workers to West Germany and laid the foundations for a large immigrant community, he stated that Turks feel let down by Germany as Turkey pursues a slow-moving bid into the EU;

    he urged more support. Clearly, this is an indication that, while Turkey seems to be so busy in pursuing its regional foreign policy and passion for becoming a regional superpower, its bid for an old dream of membership in the EU should be considered strong and alive.

    This is also against all recent frequent remarks of AKP government officials who claim their country is in a better economic and political position without joining the EU. Indeed, since the rise of the Islamist-oriented regime of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) in 2002, Turkey has undergone a new social and political transformation and it seems the new Turkish elites have been trying hard to expand their sphere of economic and political influence in the Middle East and Islamic world in general in new ways.

    Therefore, while many Turkish political observers have argued that it is natural for Turkey to come to this conclusion and that it might not need the economic and political benefits of the EU as badly as it thought it did, what?s the analysis of Erdogan?s official trip to two arch-enemy states (Germany and France),which openly opposed Turkey?s membership into the EU?

    Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Germany to speak plainly about Turkey?s prospects of joining the EU, but clearly the Turkish Prime Minister?s remarks came at a time when German and French resistance to Turkish EU membership is seen by Ankara to have reduced Turkey-EU relations to a new low.

    In the past, EU officials used to criticize Turkey on the grounds that it has illegally occupied a large portion of Cyprus, and that it resorted to the military option over the Kurdish issue and did not attempt a political solution; up to these days, none of these obstacles has yet to be removed.

    Instead,the situation gets worse. Turkey?s active regional policies have created more problems and difficulties in front of this country?s long-standing bid to join the EU. Clearly, it seems the AKP is fantasizing about a new foreign policy approach, and all of this change of heart with its previous allies becomes more obvious following the new political and social upheaval in North Africa and the Middle East.

    As a part of this new stand, the Turkish state became more aggressive toward Israel when Turkey expelled Israel’s ambassador and suspended all military agreements over its refusal to apologize for last year’s raid on a Gaza-bound flotilla. This should not be consider as one isolated incident in the recent Turkish foreign policy because it is a continuation of a pattern that started in recent years.

    In line with this above argument, the European Union has all logical reasons to become more skeptical about Turkey?s ability or even willingness to apply these precondition standards before joining the ?European Club.? As a clear sign of this slow process, accession talks began in 2005 and have moved very slowly.

    There are 35 negotiating chapters; 13 have been started, only one has concluded while 18 have been frozen. While Turkey has not been moving toward a final solution for its long-standing problems, it has been getting more involved in adventurous regional foreign policy in the recent years.It has been clearly obvious that the U.S. and other major Western powers are closely monitoring Turkey’s stance toward Hamas in Palestine.

    Indeed, Turkey was the only pro-American ally to invite the leaders of this fundamental organization that has been declared a terrorist organization to its capital, and it outraged Israel and the U.S. at the time. The situation could have spiraled out of control when Turkey threatened Israel with unprecedented action after Israeli forces attacked an aid vessel, killing 15 peace activists headed to Gaza two and half years ago. As a clear sign of defiance, the Turkish government announced that the time had come for Israel to pay for its stance that sees it above international laws and disregards human conscience.

    When Erdogan complained during his visit that Turkey feels let down by Germany for a bid into the EU that faces broad skepticism, he ignored or rather minimized the destructive effects of the AKP?s regional foreign policy over the issue of membership in the EU. As part of a more aggressive policy in the region, Turkey has taken a more hard-line stand toward Cyprus, a full member of the EU.

    This new round of conflict started when the government of Cyprus begun drilling despite Turkish warnings in an escalating row over ownership of natural resources in the eastern Mediterranean. The drilling row has become heightened amid Turkey?s already simmering crisis with Israel, which, according to the Cyprus media’s unconfirmed reports, sent unmanned surveillance aircraft to fly over the drilling operation in a gesture of solidarity with Cyprus.

    Adding complexity to the situation, Turkish Cypriot Prime Minister Irsen Kucuk (only recognized by Turkey) vowed to make every effort and show every kind of resistance to ?protect our rights and interests? and announced the formation of a special commission to monitor developments.

    Yet another problem between Turkey and Germany?the same as with most EU members–is the Kurdish conflict and more clearly the PKK issue, with Turkish politicians repeatedly attacking the German government and accusing Berlin of indirectly protecting the Kurdish militants. “Twice as many PKK members live in Germany as in the Qandil Mountains in northern Iraq,” claimed Cemil Cecik, speaker of the Turkish Parliament and a party colleague of Erdogan, according to the Süddeutsche Zeitung.

    It was just last month that the Turkish Prime Minister himself criticized German foundations and accused them of funding the PKK. On the other hand, the EU criticizes Turkey on the grounds that it has resorted to the military option over the Kurdish issue and not attempted a political solution. The Union also criticizes Turkey for not applying to the Kurdish minority the Copenhagen criteria regarding the protection of minorities.

    The Turkish approach to the Kurdish issue seems to have been incompatible with the Copenhagen criteria, which requires that Turkey should fully recognize cultural identity and cultural diversity, not least in the case of Turkish citizens of Kurdish origin.

    Therefore, it is reasonable to argue since the rise of the AKPin 2002, Turkey has moved toward a more adventurous foreign policy; clearly this has caused additional problems for its EUbid. At the moment, as a growing regional power, Turkey is starting to flex its muscles. Erdogan was hailed during a visit to the region following the Arab revolts in Tunisia and Egypt and became the symbolic head of the freedom movement.

    The moderate Islamists who were victorious in the recent Tunisian elections model their Islamic political framework on that of his governing AKP. Erdogan recently made his country’s opinion of its own power unmistakably clear: “Our interests range from the Suez Canal to the Indian Ocean,” he said.In the end, another and probably one of the most growing areas of conflict between Turkey and the EU should point to the Middle East conflict.

    While Germany and other members of the EU have called on the UN to recognize a Palestinian state, Germany–one of the most powerful members of the EU–voted against Palestinian membership of UNESCO last week. Therefore, it seems the Prime Minister and other AKP government officials are fully aware of the reasons behind the luck of support of Germany?s government for Turkey?s EU accession, but they are continuing to criticize Germany?s and other EU governments? integration policies. Nevertheless, it should be viewed as a logical outcome when the Turkish PM argued that Germany has ?abandoned? Turkey on the issue of EU accession.

  • Hamburg and Kiel debuts at Turkish logistics fair

    Hamburg and Kiel debuts at Turkish logistics fair

    November 24 – From December 8-10, the Port of Hamburg will be presenting itself for the first time at the logitrans Transport Logistics trade fair in Istanbul.

    Companies attending will be Buss Group, Polzug Intermodal,Seehafen Kiel, STENA Line Scandinavia AB as well as TCO Transcargo GmbH, as part of an initiative led by the Port of Hamburg Marketing within a German Pavilion.

    The logitrans event, now in its fifth year, is considered the most important transport trade fair in the region and provides a good platform for international collaboration in the transport and logistics industry. Last year, the logitrans attracted more than 8,000 international visitors to the trade fair grounds.

    Turkey is one of the world’s fastest growing economic nations and meanwhile ranks in 17th position of the biggest macroeconomies: 350 foreign logistics companies are engaged in Turkey, investments in the logistics sector are growing substantially and the market holds the promise of a successful future in store.

    The seaport of Kiel says it is looking forwards to its presence in Istanbul: “The event provides an outstanding platform for presenting our network of lines also in Turkey and to inform forwarding agents and carriers of the benefits of a transport route via Kiel,” emphasises Dr Dirk Claus, managing director of Seehafen Kiel GmbH & Co. KG.

    TCO Transcargo GmbH has been co-operating with forwarding agencies and logistics companies as well as direct customers in Turkey for many years now. “On account of the global changes unfolding with regard to the procurement and sales markets, Turkey as an emerging market is gaining increasing significance for us. So-called cross trade also represent an important logistics segment for us in the region,” says Gerd Sander (TCO Transcargo GmbH).

    Seven liner services connect the Port of Hamburg with Turkey, including both container and multi-purpose services along with a ro-ro service for transportation of vehicles and rolling cargo. In 2010, some 1.5 million tonnes of cargo were shipped between Hamburg and Turkey.

    via Heavy Lift – News.

  • Deutsche Borse, Istanbul Stock Exchange sign cooperation deal

    Deutsche Borse, Istanbul Stock Exchange sign cooperation deal

    Germany-based Deutsche Borse and Turkey’s Istanbul Stock Exchange (ISE) have signed an agreement to support each other in developing their respective securities markets, such as joint research projects and marketing activities in Germany and Turkey.

    The companies aim to cooperate on joint indices and product development to support closer cooperation between both Frankfurt and Istanbul.

    Deutsche Borse executive board member responsible for the Xetra business area Frank Gerstenschläger said Deutsche Borse and ISE have already initiated a number of activities to facilitate the development of communication channels and to build up a continuous relationship between the parties for the respective benefit of the securities markets in Germany and in Turkey.

    ISE CEO Huseyin Erkan said that the Turkish economy and financial markets have developed rapidly in recent years and continue this positive trend. With its initiative to actively promote the Turkish capital markets among the international audience the ISE takes an important step towards fostering this growth.

    via Deutsche Borse, Istanbul Stock Exchange sign cooperation deal – Banking Business Review.

  • After 9 murders, Germany’s Turks want crackdown on neo-Nazis

    After 9 murders, Germany’s Turks want crackdown on neo-Nazis

    After 9 murders, Germany’s Turks want crackdown on neo-Nazis

    David Crossland

    Nov 19, 2011

    BERLIN // The leader of Germany’s Turkish community yesterday called on the country to vigorously tackle racism following revelations that nine immigrants were killed by right-wing terrorists.

    Kenan Kolat claimed the country’s three million Turks were afraid of more neo-Nazi attacks.

    “Many people are afraid that this could happen again,” Mr Kolat, the chairman of the Turkish Community in Germany, said in a television interview. “We want more to be done to combat racism.

    “These killings were belittled as being isolated cases. We need to start fighting this properly.”

    German authorities have been deeply embarrassed by the discovery last week that a previously unknown neo-Nazi group calling itself the “National Socialist Underground” was behind the murders of eight Turkish immigrants and one Greek man in various cities between 2000 and 2006.

    The case has left the impression that the police were blind to the threat of far-right violence and did not investigate the murders properly because they involved immigrants.

    The victims all worked in small shops, stalls and kiosks and two of them worked in doner kebab restaurants, which is why the German media described the murders as the “Doner Killings”.

    The term has been criticised as having racist overtones.

    Two of the three terrorists, Uwe Böhnhardt and Uwe Mundlos, were found dead on November 4 in a camper van in the city of Eisenach.

    They apparently committed suicide as police closed in on them following a bank robbery.

    The third member, a woman named Beate Zschäpe, turned herself in to the police.

    The murder weapon used in all the killings, a Ceska 7.65 millimetre Browning, was found in an apartment the three had used, along with DVDs in which they claimed responsibility for the nine murders, two bomb attacks in which more than 20 immigrants were injured and the killing of a German policewoman in 2007.

    The National Blogs

    Relatives of the dead said police had rashly dismissed the possibility of a far-right motive and had instead suspected that the victims were caught up with Turkish criminal gangs.

    The name of the task force set up by the German police to investigate the crimes, “Bosphorus”, reveals their mindset, immigrants groups claim.

    Gamze K, 22, the daughter of Mehmet K, who was shot dead in his kiosk in Dortmund on April 4, 2006, said police investigating his death speculated that he had gambling debts or was killed by a protection racket. Because of German privacy laws, their last names were not being disclosed.

    “We were suddenly under suspicion,” she told Bild, a tabloid newspaper, in an interview published on Tuesday. “The police kept looking for crooked business dealings supposedly done by my father. The police didn’t take seriously our suspicion that it could have been neo-Nazis.”

    Kerim S, 24, the son of Enver S, a flower seller who was murdered in 2000, also told Bild that “they said my father had something to do with the mafia and smuggled drugs”. He added: “No one spoke of a far-right motive – but only foreigners were killed.”

    Police searching the apartment of the trio also found a list of 88 names of politicians and representatives of Turkish and Muslim organisations that they said could have been identified as targets.

    The number 88 could be significant because it is neo-Nazi code for “Heil Hitler”, H being the eighth letter in the alphabet.

    The government, alarmed about the harm to Germany’s international reputation, has called a conference of security chiefs for // TODAY? NOV. 18 ? // Friday to discuss a reform of the regionally fragmented police and intelligence authorities in response to their failure.

    It also planned to begin compiling a national register of neo-Nazis, similar to a database it already has on radical Islamists, and has pledged to start pursuing the far right with the same vigour it has devoted to the fight against Islamist terror.

    Guido Westerwelle, the foreign minister, said: “This isn’t just terrible for the victims. It isn’t just bad for our country. It is also very bad for the reputation of our country in the world.”

    The German president, Christian Wulff, plans to meet the relatives of the victims. There has been talk of a national memorial ceremony in their honour.

    “I am ashamed our state wasn’t able to protect the murdered victims and the many injured people from these terrorists,” said Thomas Oppermann, a lawmaker for the opposition Social Democrats. “The murder cases are definitely among the worst and most disgusting crimes we have seen in Germany in the last 60 years.”

    foreign.desk@thenational.ae

    via After 9 murders, Germany’s Turks want crackdown on neo-Nazis – The National.

  • Neo-Nazis behind ‘Doner Killings’ as German security services under fire

    Neo-Nazis behind ‘Doner Killings’ as German security services under fire

    Neo-Nazis behind ‘Doner Killings’ as German security services under fire

    David Crossland

    Nov 16, 2011

    BERLIN // German security authorities face accusations they grossly underestimated the threat of far-right violence after the chance discovery that a neo-Nazi group murdered nine immigrants in one of the country’s most mysterious and longest-running killing sprees.

    The group of at least three people called itself the National Socialist Underground (NSU), and had prepared a gruesome DVD to send to news organisations and Islamic cultural centres claiming it murdered eight Turks and one Greek man between 2000 and 2006 in different cities.

    The victims all worked in shops and stalls. Because two ran doner kebab stalls, the murders became known as the “Doner Killings”. The NSU also said it shot dead a German policewoman in 2007 and planted a nail bomb in Cologne in 2004 that injured 22 people, most of them Turks. Police say the group had also committed 14 bank robberies since 1999.

    Until recently, the police had insisted the “Doner Killings” were committed by the Turkish mafia or motivated by nationalist splinter groups in Turkey.

    But the link to neo-Nazis was revealed this month when police found the murder weapon, a Czech-made Ceska 7.75 millimetre Browning, in an apartment in the eastern town of Zwickau rented by neo-Nazis – two men and a woman.

    The men, Uwe Böhnhardt, 34, and Uwe Mundlos, 38, were found dead in a camper van in the eastern town of Eisenach on November 4 after apparently committing suicide following a botched bank robbery.

    A few hours later, the house in Zwickau was apparently set ablaze by their alleged accomplice, Beate Zschäpe, who later turned herself in to police.

    The case has embarrassed the security authorities, which have for years treated far-right crimes as isolated incidents committed by thugs and have devoted far more resources to combating the threat of terrorism.

    Experts are comparing the scale of the violence committed by the NSU to the campaign of assassinations and kidnappings waged by the left-wing Baader-Meinhof group that terrorised Germany in the 1970s.

    One major difference is that the Baader-Meinhof members followed up their attacks with messages of responsibility. The NSU killed in silence. While its members had been on police files as right-wing extremists since the 1990s, the existence of the group was apparently unknown to authorities until two weeks ago, and police appeared to have had no idea that they were behind the killings.

    In the burnt-out Zwickau apartment police found four DVDs already packaged and ready to send, containing a chilling 15-minute film using the Pink Panther cartoon figure that in one scene stands next to a placard reading: “Germany Tour – 9th Turk shot dead,”

    It also showed photos of victims who had been shot in the face. The DVDs were aimed at publicising the group’s actions for the first time, police said.

    The trio’s ability to get away with the murders for so long has triggered calls for a reform of Germany’s regionally fragmented security agencies.

    Representatives of Muslim and Jewish groups accused the police of having been blind to the emergence of neo-Nazis bent on violence against minorities.

    The chairman of the Central Council of Muslims in Germany, Aiman Mazyek, said on Monday that German authorities had chronically underestimated right-wing extremism for 20 years.

    “Evidently right-wing terrorism was able to expand unhindered because the authorities were too focused on religiously motivated attackers,” Mr Mazyek told Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung, a regional newspaper.

    Eastern Germany in particular has been dogged by right-wing extremism since the fall of the Berlin Wall. There was an upsurge in violence against immigrants and asylum seekers in the early 1990s as people vented their anger over high unemployment that followed the rapid economic collapse in the former communist region. Analysts have also blamed the rise of neo-Nazism in the east on a lack of education about the Nazi crimes in schools during the communist regime. Attacks on Jewish and immigrant property and racist assaults on ethnic minorities are common there.

    Experts on right-wing extremism said the neo-Nazis could have been stopped before they killed.

    “No one can say it wasn’t possible to detect the potential of the Thuringia groups in the 1990s,” Bernd Wagner, an analyst of the far-right culture, said. “They should have been taken seriously and tracked down.”

    The group went underground in 1998. Ms Zschäpe has been remanded. A suspected helper was arrested on Sunday in the northern town of Kleinau.

    The co-leader of the Greens Party, Cem Özdemir, told Welt am Sonntag: “How could the suspects spend years murdering people due to right-wing extremist motives without the police and domestic intelligence service having even the slightest inkling of it?”

    The case has led to renewed calls to ban the National Democratic Party, described as the flagship of the far-right. The party is openly xenophobic and anti-Semitic and extols a vision of a Fourth Reich containing only Germans.

    Analysts say the far-right has festered in the east due to a lack of political support for anti-racism campaigns and a failure by police to clamp down hard enough on far-right crimes.

    “There is a whole landscape of militant groups from which such terrorist groups and networks can emerge,” said Mr Wagner.

    foreign.desk@thenational.ae

    via Full: Neo-Nazis behind ‘Doner Killings’ as German security services under fire – The National.