A new German agency tasked with advising local
authorities on how to counteract neo-Nazis was announced in Berlin
Tuesday, two months after the exposure of an anti-immigrant gang that
has been blamed for 10 deadly shooting.
Family Affairs
Minister Kristina Schroeder said the information and skill agency would
be a one-stop source of advice to municipalities seeking ways to check
neo-Nazi recruiters.
She spoke after a day-long meeting in Berlin with church activists and youth workers.
In November, police blamed three neo-Nazis who had met as teenagers in
the 1990s for nine unsolved murders of immigrant shopkeepers and the
shooting of a police officer.
Two of the three killed
themselves before arrest and the survivor is in custody, awaiting
indictment. A survey this week funded by parliament suggested many
German schoolchildren use 'Jew' as a term of abuse and 20 per cent of
Germans are latently anti-Semitic.
'We have to better grasp
that attacks on minorities are attacks on ourselves as a whole,' said
Schroeder in Berlin after the meeting. The new agency would advise
youth workers on effective ways to thwart neo-Nazis.
However,
she said her ministry's anti-Nazi annual budget of 24 million euros
(31 million dollars) was unlikely to be expanded.
Hans-Peter Friedrich, the interior minister, said he wanted to deny neo-Nazis any refuge in society.
'Only when we all actively stand up for democracy and tolerance can we
root out right-wing extremism from our society,' he said.
The
chairman of Germany's Central Council of Jews, Dieter Graumann,
criticized the slow pace of the inquiry into the 10 killings. 'The
authorities are in continued hibernation in investigating these
dreadful acts,' he said in an interview.
A parliamentary
commission of inquiry into the killings is scheduled to be set up on
Thursday by a resolution in the Bundestag.
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