Society's Child
Berlin's Senate has announced on Twitter that it has banned the "jihadist-Salafist association Jama'atu Berlin," also known as Tauhid Berlin.
The tweet Thursday said police in Berlin and Brandenburg had carried out early-morning searches of properties belonging to the group's members.
A spokesman cited by the German press agency dpa said around 800 police — including special operations commandos — took part in the raids, which targeted the districts of Reinickendorf, Moabit, Wedding and Neukölln. No arrests were immediately reported.
What is the radical group accused of?
A statement from the Senate said Jama'atu Berlin had propagated "a martyr cult," supported the "Islamic State," rejected the German constitution and called for sharia as the sole legitimate law.
"(In the group), there are severe anti-Semites who are calling for the death of Jews," Berlin Interior Secretary Torsten Akmann said.
The group is believed to have about 20 members, some of whom had attracted attention in the past by handing out leaflets in parts of Berlin.
Berlin Interior Senator Andreas Geisel told a news conference the unregistered association had been under surveillance for two years.
"The danger of Islamist terrorism remains high," Geisel said. "Today's ban is another building block in the resolute fight against violent extremism."
The Tagesspiegel newspaper reported that several of the group's followers previously attended the Fussilet Mosque, which was closed down in 2017. Anis Amri, the Tunisian national who carried out an attack on a Berlin Christmas market in 2016 killing 12 people, also frequented the mosque, according to authorities.
The number of Salafists in Germany rose to a record high of 12,150 in 2019, according to the domestic intelligence agency.
Comment: A day later Reuters reports that German security forces raided a far right group:
Hundreds of police in Germany carried out dawn raids on 27 homes and business premises on Friday, including a lawyer's office, in an operation targeting members of far right groups suspected of drugs and weapons trafficking, public broadcaster MDR said.See also:
Prosecutors told the broadcaster that eight people, aged from 24 to 55, had so far been arrested in the raids which were carried out by 500 police officers. The suspects were members of the neo-Nazi groups Turonen and Garde 20, MDR said.
Authorities said the two gangs have for years been kingpins in the drugs trade in the eastern state of Thuringia, running a network that distributed crystal meth and weapons.
The offices of a lawyer in the central state of Hesse were also raided.
MDR said that its own investigations had revealed that the raids were the result of two years of tapping and bugging operations by security services.
The Turonen and Garde 20 are recognisable by their wearing of black clothes with far right nationalist insignia on them. They have become major players in the promotion of far right heavy metal concerts, at which neo-Nazi bands from Germany and other countries perform.
- Man attacks multiple people with knife near train station in Frankfurt, Germany
- Deadly knife attacker in Dresden was under German 'intelligence surveillance' on the day of the attack
- Austrian attacker was under surveillance as known jihadist but 'mistakes' led to investigation being dropped
The pigstate just had to 'balance out' any arrest of Germany's #1 protected minority, Islamics! HOW INSANE!
R.C.