Germans protest against neo-nazis

Thousands of people gathered near Germany’s biggest World War II soldiers cemetery today to protest against far-right extremism.

Germans protest against neo-nazis

Thousands of people gathered near Germany’s biggest World War II soldiers cemetery today to protest against far-right extremism.

Demonstrators formed a human chain near the cemetery in Halbe, south of Berlin, to hear speeches from politicians and musicians.

The Day of the Democrats protest, called by an alliance of mainstream political parties, went ahead even though police banned an annual demonstration there by neo-Nazi groups.

Some 700 far-right supporters instead gathered at another war-era cemetery in Seelow, about 60 miles further east.

Politicians are vowing to step up efforts to counter the spread of far-right ideology, especially in the former communist east, after a spate of incidents involving suspected neo-Nazis.

Halbe is in the same eastern state where suspected neo-Nazis on November 10 attacked a memorial to a synagogue burned down on Kristallnacht, the anti-Jewish pogrom of 1938.

Far-right activists have gathered for years in Halbe to glorify fallen Wehrmacht soldiers on the eve of Germany’s annual Day of Mourning for the victims of war.

Chancellor Angela Merkel is to take part in ceremonies in Berlin tomorrow marking the day of remembrance.

The remains of about 28,000 German soldiers lie buried in Halbe and another 600 in Seelow, most of them victims of one of Nazi Germany’s last stands in April 1945 as Soviet forces advanced toward Berlin.

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