Far-Right Group Plotted To Attack Muslims, Politicians: German Prosecutors

Federal prosecutors ordered 12 men in the group - called "The Hard Core" - detained after uncovering a plot to sow chaos with targeted attacks.
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An unidentified person is brought to the Federal Supreme Court by police officers in Karlsruhe, Germany, Saturday, Feb 15, 2020. The person are one of among 12 men detained Friday in nationwide raids on suspicion of forming and supporting a “right-wing terrorist organization.” A federal judge on Saturday ordered the men held in investigative detention. (Uli Deck/dpa via AP)
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BERLIN (Reuters) - German federal prosecutors won a court order to detain 12 men arrested on suspicion of involvement in a far-right plot to overthrow the political order by means of targeted attacks.

The men were arrested on Friday, four on suspicion of forming a right-wing terrorist organization last September and the rest of offering them financial support.

They were planning to stage attacks on politicians, asylum seekers and Muslims, and a federal court judge ordered them detained pending further investigations on Saturday, prosecutors said.

Popular support for far-right groups is growing in Germany, notably in the country’s former Communist east, as part of a polarization at both ends of the political spectrum that is undermining the mainstream establishment that been in government since World War Two.

The men, aged between 20 and 50, named their group ‘Derharte Kern’ (The Hard Core), the Welt am Sonntag newspaper reported on Sunday, saying they had been arrested in six different states.

The suspects, some with blankets draped over their heads, were escorted by police wearing balaclavas and body armor into the Federal Court in Karlsruhe for Saturday’s hearing, ReutersTV footage showed.

Citing investigators, Welt am Sonntag said the men had got to know each other via WhatsApp, a messaging service owned byFacebook, and met up subsequently. The group was put under surveillance in late summer 2019.

In the raids, investigators found stores of materials that could be used to produce home-made bombs, the newspaper wrote.

No further comment was immediately available from federal prosecutors.

German law allows for individuals suspected of being on the verge of committing serious offenses to be detained for up to six months, extendable to 12 months in extreme cases, according to legal experts.

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