German Chancellor Merz 'very sceptical' about banning far-right AfD
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Thursday said he was "very sceptical" about mounting calls to ban the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD), after domestic intelligence classified the party as "confirmed right-wing extremist."
Merz told Die Zeit weekly that it must be proven that a group was "aggressively" fighting against the country's free democratic order for it to be banned. "And the burden of proof lies solely with the state."
Germany's domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV), upgraded its classification of the AfD - now the second-largest party in the German parliament - from "suspected" to "confirmed" right-wing extremist on May 2.
But after the anti-immigrant AfD took legal steps against the move, the agency later suspended its decision until a court settles the party's lawsuit.
The classification of the AfD as a confirmed extremist organization, which would give the intelligence service broader surveillance powers over the party, has sparked renewed debate on whether the German parliament should move to ban it.
A ban of a political party must be requested by one of Germany's houses of parliament or the government itself before a formal decision by the country's Constitutional Court.
But Merz said he had "always resisted the idea of pursuing a ban" from within parliament.
"To me, it smacks too much of eliminating political rivals," he added.

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'Violation of int'l law': Hamas, foreign gov'ts attack Israel over interception of Gaza flotilla
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Frederick Forsyth, who has died at the age of 86, wrote meticulously researched thrillers which sold in their millions. A former fighter pilot, journalist and spy, many of his books were based on his own experience. He wove intricate technical details into his stories, without detracting from the lightning pace of his plots. His research often embarrassed the authorities, who were forced to admit that some of the shady tactics he revealed were used in real-life espionage. Frederick McCarthy Forsyth was born on 25 August 1938 in Ashford, Kent. The only child of a furrier, he dealt with loneliness by immersing himself in adventure stories. Among his favourites were the works John Buchan and H Rider Haggard, but Forsyth adored Ernest Hemingway's book on bullfighters, Death in the Afternoon. He was so captivated that - at the age of 17 - he went to Spain and started practising with a cape. He never actually fought a bull. 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All these tricks of the trade would be incorporated in a tale of an attempted assassination of President de Gaulle, The Day of the Jackal, which he pounded out in his bedsit on an old typewriter in just 35 days. He spent months trying to get it published but faced a string of rejections. "For starters, de Gaulle was still alive," he said, "so readers already knew a fictional assassination plot set in 1963 couldn't succeed." Eventually, a publisher risked a short print run and sales of the book, described once as "an assassin's manual", took off, first in the UK and then in the US. The Day of the Jackal showcased what would become the traditional hallmarks of a Forsyth thriller. It wove together fact and fiction, often using the names of real individuals and events. The Jackal's forgery of a British passport, using the name of a dead child taken from a churchyard, was perfectly feasible in the days before electronic databases and cross-checking. 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