
Police in Germany were accused of excessive use of force by protesters after riot police charged and used batons on a group of anti-fascist demonstrators over the weekend.
The protest alliance Widersetzen, demonstrating against the founding of a youth organization tied to the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, accused police of brutality against protesters in the western German city of Giessen.
"Police officers cleared a path for the fascists with their batons," spokeswoman Laura Wolf said on Sunday.
Hesse's Interior Minister Roman Poseck meanwhile took the side of the police and said "without the police, there would have been the worst acts of violence and civil war-like conditions in Giessen."
Police said their efforts were aimed at preventing violence between opposing political groups.
Tens of thousands gathered on Saturday, blocking roads into the university town of some 90,000 in an attempt to disrupt the formation of the far-right youth wing.
Police in Germany have been accused of using excessive force at pro-Palestinian, environmentalist and anti-fascist demonstrations, where protesters have been injured by chokeholds, punches to the head and being thrown to the ground.
The alliance said it initially had no figures on injured demonstrators or on people taken into custody. A local hospital told dpa several people had reported with injuries to hands and legs. Police said around 10 to 15 officers also suffered minor injuries.
Marburg lawyer Jannik Rienhoff, who represents several activists taken into custody, said the basic right to freedom of assembly had "not been taken particularly seriously" even beforehand.
Suraj Mailitafi of Widersetzen said the city of Giessen and police created a climate of fear before the protests and that participants were the victims of "arbitrary violence," while the far-right was courted.
latest_posts
- 1
Hoist Your Style: Famous Hairdos for Ladies - 2
Find the Historical backdrop of the Modern Unrest: Changing Society and Innovation - 3
The Manual for Electric Vehicles that will be hot dealers in 2023 - 4
At least 36 dead in major fire in Hong Kong residential blocks - 5
Deadly heat worldwide prompts $300 million for climate health research at COP30
April's full moon decides the date of Easter — here's how it works
Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
Israel says it killed armed Hamas 'terrorists' in Gaza
Attorney-General to High Court: Gov’t violating draft ruling, risking rule of law
6 Popular Men's Aromas On the planet
Study finds humans were making fire 400,000 years ago, far earlier than once thought
One perk to marrying Richard Marx later in life? 'We don't have time' for stupid arguments, says Daisy Fuentes.
Top 10 Moving Style Architects of the Year
'Supergirl' drops 1st teaser trailer: Watch Milly Alcock as Kara Zor-El and the return of Krypto the Superdog












