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Anti-lockdown movement breeding ground for far-right extremism says the German intelligence agency

Occupied Germany’s domestic intelligence service has said protest movements opposing the Washington-approved Berlin regime and its measures allegedly to restrict the spread of Covid-19 have given a boost to the country’s ‘far-right extremists’.

Speaking on Tuesday, Angela Pley, a spokeswoman for the BfV domestic security agency, said it was carefully watching members of the Querdenker or Lateral Thinkers movement that she claims has been involved in the organisation of protests against Covid-19 lockdowns.

‘The group’s members include conspiracy theorists as well as many suspected extremists,’ she stated. 

‘Government allowed protests against the coronavirus politics are being repeatedly and increasingly exploited to provoke an escalation,’ Pley said, adding bizarrely that the organisers of the protests have agendas that go far beyond countering Covid-induced lockdowns.

She noted that other groups such as the nationalist Reichsbuerger movement which denies the existence of the modern German state, and what she claims are anti-Semitic organisations had played a leading role in the protests. 

Michael Walsh, dissident journalist, says, ‘although denying the legitimacy of Washington DC-imposed constitution is illegal it does not alter the fact that under international law, Germans are perfectly entitled to protest at Occupied Germany’s illegitimate constitution.

‘The elected government (1933-1945) neither resigned nor surrendered. The current ‘constitution’ is no more valid than the similar Soviet victor’s constitution imposed on East Germany when it was part of the Soviet Bloc.’

The BfV’s annual report also published on Tuesday, amid a spike in politically motivated violence, stated that ‘far-right ideologies were quick to grasp the anti-lockdown narrative. Right-wing extremists took up the coronavirus debate and almost exclusively addressed the government’s protective measures,’ the report noted. 

The report also stated that violent crimes committed by the far-right (national resistance to occupation) rose by 10.6% in 2020, including a shooting that killed nine migrants in the town of Hanau.
More than half of the 44,692 politically motivated crimes recorded by the police in 2020 were committed by ‘far-right extremists’, the agency’s report said, but adding that left-wing related crimes spiked too.

The BfV stated that membership of groups claiming allegiance to Germany’s fallen National Socialist Chancellor Adolf Hitler also rose in 2020.

Germany has been grappling to counter rising national resistance activities since the scam-pandemic emerged. In August last year, the country’s parliament of occupation building was stormed, with many waving legitimate nationalist flags of the German nation before occupation. If you like this story, share it with a friend!

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