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Hundreds run riot in Stuttgart city centre after drug checks

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German authorities have expressed shock over a rampage of an “unprecedented scale” in the centre of Stuttgart, where hundreds of partygoers ran riot overnight and into Sunday, smashing shop windows, plundering stores and attacking police.

Two dozen people, half of them German nationals, were arrested provisionally, as police reported 19 colleagues hurt. “They were unbelievable scenes that have left me speechless. In my 46 years of police service, I have never experienced this,” said Stuttgart police chief Frank Lutz.

Tensions built up shortly after midnight when officers carried out checks on a 17-year-old German man suspected of using drugs, said Stuttgart deputy police chief Thomas Berger.

Crowds who were milling around at the city’s biggest square, the Schlossplatz, immediately rallied around the young man and began flinging stones and bottles at police. The groups of mostly men also used sticks or poles to smash windows of police vehicles parked in the area.

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“I sharply condemn this brutal outbreak of violence, these acts against people and things are criminal action that must be forcefully prosecuted and condemned,” said Winfried Kretschmann, Baden-Württemberg’s state premier, in a statement.

At the height of the clashes, some 400 to 500 people joined in the battle against police officers and rescue workers.

As officers pushed back against the crowd, they broke up into small groups, carrying on their rampage around the city centre, smashing shop windows and looting stores along nearby Königstraße, a major shopping street. Videos posted on Twitter showed people breaking shop windows, leaving goods strewn on the streets.

One jewellery store was completely emptied and a mobile phone shop wrecked, according to regional broadcaster SWR. In all, nine shops were looted, while 14 others suffered damage.

After smaller-scale clashes broke out downtown last week between police and groups of young people, officers bulked up their deployment with an extra 100-strong team. But the scale of the violence overwhelmed the officers, forcing them to call in reinforcements from other parts of the state.

Only four and a half hours later were they able to quell the violence that has been described as “civil war-like scenes” by Social Democrat regional MP Sascha Binder.

Police on Sunday ruled out any political motives for the rampage, describing the perpetrators as people from the “party scene or events scene”.

An unusually large number of people were in the city centre to enjoy the summer evening because discos and clubs were still shut over he coronavirus pandemic, said Stuttgart mayor Fritz Kuhn. Some of the rioters were under the influence of alcohol, he said, adding that others may have been driven by “the addiction of putting a little film on social media”.

Asked about the nationalities of the 12 non-Germans who were detailed, Berger said they came from a range of countries, from Croatia and Portugal to Afghanistan and Somalia.

Saying the riots were of “an unprecedented nature”, the interior minister for the region, Thomas Strobl, vowed to “use all available means available under the rule of law to go after the rioters”.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ot-in-stuttgart-city-centre-after-drug-checks
 
Several police officers were injured in clashes with residents of an apartment complex in the German city of Goettingen who had been put under quarantine following a coronavirus outbreak, authorities have said.

The violence broke out on Saturday as a group of residents sought to break through a metal barrier erected to keep the 700 people living in the residential complex inside to stop the spread of the virus.

Residents were placed under quarantine on Thursday after two tested positive. By Friday, 120 people in the building had tested positive.
 
Police reinforcements have been sent to maintain a coronavirus quarantine on a tower block in the German city of Goettingen after violence on Saturday.

Seven-hundred people were placed in quarantine, but 200 trying to get out clashed with police.

Residents attacked police with fireworks, bottles and metal bars, officials said.

The quarantine was introduced on Thursday after two residents tested positive.

By Friday, 120 were found to be infected. The majority of residents have been complying with the quarantine.

Anyone testing negative is being required to have a further test. If that is negative, they will be allowed to leave the block, but under certain conditions, such as wearing a mask.

Local officials cited communication problems, with many of the residents not understanding the need for a second test.

Translators have been used and information in German and Romanian is now being texted to those who need it, German media report.

Several police officers were injured as people tried to break through a security cordon.

Meanwhile, Covid-19 cases have continued to rise at a meat plant.

The number of positive tests linked to the Tonnies processing plant in north-west Germany has risen to 1,331. The authorities in the Gutersloh area told 6,500 employees and their families to go into quarantine earlier this week.

The regional prime minister of North-Rhine-Westphalia, Armin Laschet, warned of "an enormous risk of pandemic" while conceding that the outbreak was currently confined to the Tonnies company and could still be dealt with through a targeted lockdown.

The industry employs many foreign workers, and the local authorities are trying to arrange Polish, Bulgarian and Romanian translators to explain the need for restrictions.

In another development, Germany's 'R' number has risen to 2.88 - the number of people who someone with Covid-19 could infect. A number below one is seen as necessary to contain the spread of the disease.

The Robert Koch Institute issued the data based on a four-day average. The seven-day average came up with a lower figure of 2.03.

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The institute cited isolated outbreaks, such as the meat plant, for the rise.

Germany is generally considered to have done a good job containing the virus, thanks to widespread testing. The latest confirmed figures show 189,822 people testing positive, and 8,882 deaths - significantly lower than similar sized European neighbours.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53131941
 
Germany's interior ministry has banned neo-Nazi group Nordadler, or Northern Eagle, and conducted police raids in North Rhineland-Westphalia, Saxony, Brandenburg and Lower Saxony.

The group uses social media channels such as Telegram, Instagram and Discord to promote its ideology, attract new members and condone far-right attacks.

Steve Alter, the ministry's spokesman, on Tuesday announced the move against Nordadler on Twitter, saying "right-wing extremism and anti-Semitism have no place on the internet".

According to the ministry's assessment, the group follows a Nazi ideology and operates under several names.

Its members pledge themselves to Adolf Hitler and other high-profile Nazis, as well as using symbols and language from the Nazi regime.

They were also planning a Nazi settlement project with like-minded people in rural areas. The group is described as highly anti-Semitic.

Its leader expressed sympathy for last year's attack on a synagogue in the German city of Halle in a public group on messaging service Telegram, according to the ministry.

The attack in Halle saw a 28-year-old German man try to force his way into a Jewish place of worship. When he failed, he killed two people on the street and at a kebab shop. He is due to appear in court in July.

Nordadler is the third neo-Nazi group to be banned by the interior ministry this year, coming after crackdowns on Combat 18 as well as United German Peoples and Tribes.

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has declared far-right violence the "biggest security threat facing Germany" and promised tougher security measures, including a crackdown on online hate speech.

source Al Jazeera
 
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