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Five teenagers held after far-right group planned attacks, German police say

Five teenagers held after far-right group planned attacks, German police say

The early-morning arrests in various parts of Germany were accompanied by searches at 13 properties, federal prosecutors said.
Four of those arrested – identified only as Benjamin H, Ben-Maxim H, Lenny M and Jason R, in line with German privacy rules – are suspected of membership in a domestic terror organisation.
The fifth, Jerome M, is accused of supporting the group. Two of the arrested also are accused of attempted murder and aggravated arson.
All are aged between 14 and 18.
Prosecutors said they are also investigating three other people, aged 18 to 21, who are already in custody. All the suspects are German citizens.
According to the prosecutors, the group was formed in mid-April 2024 or earlier.
They said that its members saw themselves as the last resort to defend the 'German nation' and aimed to bring about the collapse of Germany's democratic order.
Two of the suspects set a fire at a cultural centre in Altdobern in eastern Germany in October, prosecutors said, adding that several people living in the building at the time escaped injury only by chance.
In January, another two suspects allegedly broke a window at a home for asylum-seekers in Schmolln and tried unsuccessfully to start a blaze by setting off fireworks.
They daubed the group's initials and slogans such as 'Foreigners out,' 'Germany for the Germans' and 'Nazi area' on the walls, as well as swastikas, prosecutors said.
Also in January, three suspects allegedly planned an arson attack on a home for asylum-seekers in Senftenberg, but it never came about because of the earlier arrests of two of the men.
Justice minister Stefanie Hubig said it was 'particularly shocking' that all of those arrested on Wednesday were minors at the time the group was allegedly founded.
'This is an alarm signal and it shows that right-wing extremist terrorism knows no age,' Ms Hubig said.
In a separate case a week ago, German authorities banned a far-right group called 'Kingdom of Germany' as a threat to the country's democratic order and arrested four of its alleged leaders.
In an annual report released on Tuesday, the Federal Criminal Police Office said that the number of violent crimes with a right-wing motivation was up 17.2% last year to 1,488.
That was part of an overall increase in violent politically motivated offences to 4,107, an increase of 15.3%.
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Explosive claims emerge about Outback Wrangler Matt Wright in court after fatal helicopter crash
Explosive claims emerge about Outback Wrangler Matt Wright in court after fatal helicopter crash

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Explosive claims emerge about Outback Wrangler Matt Wright in court after fatal helicopter crash

A pilot who survived a deadly helicopter crash has detailed lies he told investigators after deleting phone messages, saying he was in a 'very bad way' at the time with life-changing injuries. Sebastian Robinson is a paraplegic after the crash in February 2022 that killed Outback Wrangler co-star Chris 'Willow' Wilson in Arnhem Land in the Northern Territory. Mr Robinson is giving evidence in the Supreme Court in Darwin at the trial of reality TV star Matt Wright, who has pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. Prosecutors allege the helicopter operator was worried crash investigators would discover flight-time meters were regularly disconnected to extend flying hours beyond official thresholds and that paperwork was falsified. Under questioning from senior defence counsel for Wright, David Edwardson KC, Mr Robinson admitted he had lied to Australian Transport Safety Bureau investigators around the same time. Among the lies were that, before the crash, the helicopter was functioning well and that he was busy with the role of maintenance controller at Wright's Helibrook company, when in fact he held the position in name only. Mr Robinson admitted saying there had only been a spark plug issue with the helicopter when 'there were many more problems with the aircraft.' He said his condition hindered his proper judgment at the time. 'I was in a very bad way.' The 32-year-old told the jury on Tuesday he had fractures of his vertebrae, resulting in a complete severance of his spinal cord, rendering him a paraplegic. Both his lungs were punctured, his left elbow and ankles were fractured, and he suffered a traumatic brain injury that still causes him cognition problems and mood swings. Mr Edwardson has previously alleged that, in the lead-up to the crash, Mr Robinson was a cocaine-using 'party animal' who was 'hopeless' at flight record keeping. The court on Wednesday heard Mr Robinson had done contract work with Indigenous groups in Arnhem Land, including Aboriginal rangers. Under questioning by Mr Edwardson, Mr Robinson agreed it was 'unforgivable' to supply alcohol or illegal drugs to Indigenous communities where liquor was banned. 'There might have been the occasion I'd have a very small amount of alcohol under the seat of the helicopter, but I wasn't supplying a commercial amount,' he said. The court heard Wright visited Mr Robinson in Royal Brisbane Hospital when he was heavily sedated with 'tubes coming out of me everywhere.' Crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC asked Mr Robinson what Wright had requested of him at his hospital bedside, and he replied 'to manipulate hours on my aircraft.' 'He asked if I would consider putting any of his hours, from his helicopter, onto my helicopter.' The court was told Mr Robinson was being asked to put egg-collecting hours flown on Wright's crashed helicopter onto his helicopter, which was not fitted with equipment for egg collecting. Mr Robinson said he told Wright on a return visit the next day that 'I didn't feel comfortable doing it.' The court was told Mr Robinson was asked to fly egg-collecting missions in Arnhem Land, where COVID restrictions were in place, because Wright was an anti-vaxxer and could not enter the Indigenous territory. Jurors heard Wright visited Mr Robinson in hospital despite requirements to show a COVID vaccination certificate and having to complete a test for the virus. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident, and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for either the crash, Mr Wilson's death, or Mr Robinson's injuries. The trial continues.

Europe is giving up on free movement
Europe is giving up on free movement

Spectator

time4 hours ago

  • Spectator

Europe is giving up on free movement

Ten years ago on 31 August 2015, Angela Merkel told the German press what she was going to do about the swell of Syrian refugees heading to Europe. With the three fateful words 'Wir schaffen das' – 'We can handle it' – she ushered in a new era of uncontrolled mass migration, not just for Germany but for the rest of the European Union too. The then chancellor, so often described by her supporters in the press as the 'queen of Europe', was adamant that Germany was a 'strong country', which had the resources to support the sudden influx of migrants. 'We will provide protection to all those fleeing to us from wars,' she insisted. Whether or not other European leaders shared her confidence was immaterial. Thanks to the EU's porous internal borders and the freedom of movement, in practice her open-doors migration policy applied to every member state. 'In retrospect it was pretty much the most disastrous government policy of this century anywhere in Europe,' says one senior British diplomat. The inevitable surge of immigrants into Europe from Syria and North Africa, which began in 2015, helped swing the vote for Brexit the following year. It emboldened the people-trafficking industry and duly destabilised politics in almost every European country, as populist and anti-immigration parties thrived on public anger. Wir schaffen das will haunt Merkel for the rest of her life. Yet her other remarks that day have largely been forgotten. In the same press conference she warned: 'If Europe fails on the refugee question, this close relationship with universal citizen rights [for which the continent is known] will be broken. It will be destroyed and Europe will no longer be what we see it to be.' She was devastatingly wrong and right. Thanks to her decisions, Germany and the EU more generally manifestly failed to manage the migrant crisis. Yet she was correct that failure to deal with the 'refugee question' would change Europe beyond recognition. 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The Tory government's plan to deport migrants to Rwanda was the subject of much derision; now European governments are considering following suit. Both Austria and Germany have in the past two years expressed interest in a similar 'Rwanda-style' scheme for processing asylum claims abroad. Last September, the former German migration commissioner Joachim Stamp went as far as to suggest that Berlin use the facilities which lie abandoned since Keir Starmer's government scrapped the Rwanda scheme. So far only Italy's Giorgia Meloni has managed to strike a third-country asylum processing agreement (with Albania in 2023), although it has yet to become operational, thanks to the interference of the European Court of Justice. But across the continent, politicians on the right are now echoing Donald Trump and becoming bolder in their calls for mass deportation. Before the summer of 2015, migrants seeking refuge in Europe were obliged to apply for asylum in the first member state of the bloc they entered under the rules of the EU's Dublin agreement. All that changed when Merkel's government suspended the rules for Syrian nationals, triggering a Europe-wide stampede, as Syrians, followed by Afghans, Iranians, Iraqis and more, scrambled to claim refuge in Germany. Their passage across Europe was eased by the Schengen Agreement, which had abolished internal border controls between EU member states, allowing people to pass between countries without paperwork checks. It didn't matter that, after just two weeks, on 13 September 2015, the German government introduced temporary border controls to stem the flow. The refugees kept coming: by the end of 2015, 1.1 million had made it to Germany. In the ensuing years, more than two million would follow. The Schengen zone of free movement, which turned 40 this year, is in a sorry state. Those temporary border controls Merkel brought in a decade ago are being used by a third of the EU's member states within the area. Under the rules governing the zone, member states can introduce the controls as a 'last resort' in the event of a 'serious threat to public policy or internal security' and renew them for up to six months at a time. According to the list drawn up by the European Commission, seven of the nine EU members which have imposed temporary border checks have done so in response to the pressure they are under from illegal migration. Austria, for example, which faces migrants entering the EU via the west Balkans, first closed its borders with Slovenia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Hungary in October 2023, citing threats associated with the high levels of 'irregular migration and migrant smuggling', as well as 'the strain on the asylum reception system and basic services'. France first shut its borders with Belgium, Germany, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Spain and Italy last November. Among its reasons for doing so was 'the growing criminal networks facilitating irregular migration and smuggling, and irregular migration flows towards the Franco-British border that risk infiltration by radicalised individuals'. Emmanuel Macron's government is struggling to respond to the popularity of the right-wing National Rally, led by Marine Le Pen, which is more than ten points ahead in the polls. In June, Le Pen derided the EU's new pact to establish a common asylum system – due to be operational by the middle of next year – as 'a deal with the devil to flood Europe with migrants, dilute the population and wipe out European culture'. Meloni became prime minister of Italy in large part because she had promised to restrict immigration and people believed her. Italy is the most commonly used entry point into Europe for illegal migrants from North Africa. 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The country is heading to the polls on 29 October, after the leader of the anti-Islam Freedom party, Geert Wilders, pulled out of the governing coalition in June in a row over immigration and asylum policy. The polls are tight, but Wilders, who launched his election campaign at a protest against a new asylum seekers' centre being built in the city of Helmond, is leading on 19 per cent. Germany went so far as to impose border controls along all nine of its shared EU borders in October 2023 after pressure was heaped on the government by the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party. Following a series of terror attacks committed by failed asylum seekers last year, the AfD dominated February's federal election campaign with a fervent anti-immigrant message. The party's co-leader Alice Weidel repeatedly pushed the controversial, yet vague, policy of 'remigration' for an as-yet-undefined cohort of foreigners. In May, Germany's Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, introduced a new, tougher border regime, giving border guards the power to turn back anyone trying to enter without the correct paperwork. The federal police were also granted the power to reject asylum seekers at the border if they had grounds to do so. The measures were necessary, Merz said, because 'the protection of Europe's external borders is not sufficiently guaranteed'. Merz's new border checks have, however, worsened relations with Poland, which introduced temporary border checks last month. A presidential election campaign in June was won by the conservative Karol Nawrocki, who ran on the slogan 'Poland first, Poles first'. Self-styled 'citizen patrols' of far-right vigilantes have been gathering along the Polish-German border to protest and obstruct the German authorities' efforts to send migrants back across the border. 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In theory, most of the temporary border controls currently in force are due to expire in the coming months, but it would be political suicide to lift them. Sacrificing free movement under Schengen is a quick win for EU members unwilling or unable to do more to alleviate the concerns of their populations. As the diplomatic spat between Germany and Poland proves, until the EU can pull together on a cohesive migrant strategy, it's every state for itself. The irony is that Britain, which left the EU partly in order to take back control of its borders, is now an outlier: while irregular crossings into the EU are down 18 per cent in the first seven months of this year, attempted and successful illegal crossings into Britain via the Channel are up 26 per cent compared with last year, with nearly 42,000 migrants having made the journey so far this year. In these conditions, free movement cannot survive. Faced with a choice of protecting their political futures, or defending the EU's noble principles, Europe's leaders will always opt for the former. 'I have always advocated European solutions,' said Merkel, pointedly, after Merz's border regime was introduced. 'Otherwise, we could see Europe destroyed.' Yet European leaders increasingly see their job as salvaging their countries from the destruction she wrought.

‘Viable chance' of ceasefire in Ukraine thanks to Trump, says Starmer
‘Viable chance' of ceasefire in Ukraine thanks to Trump, says Starmer

Powys County Times

time6 hours ago

  • Powys County Times

‘Viable chance' of ceasefire in Ukraine thanks to Trump, says Starmer

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