BERLIN: Police in eastern Germany were accused on Wednesday of stoking tensions by leaking to far-right groups the arrest warrant over a fatal stabbing that sparked racist mob violence.

“It’s unacceptable that some police officers think they can leak things like this even though they know they’re committing an offence,” said Saxony state’s deputy premier Martin Dulig, calling the release a “scandal”.

Saxony, in Germany’s ex-communist east, has again become a hotspot for xenophobia after a knife killing early Sunday in the city of Chemnitz led to protests that degenerated into right-wing extremists hunting down immigrants in the streets.

Police on Monday arrested a 22-year-old Iraqi and a Syrian, 23, suspected of killing a 35-year-old German identified only as Daniel H. with multiple stabbings in the late-night altercation.

Authorities have not yet fully disclosed the identities of the victim or suspects in keeping with the German convention of protecting the identities of people involved in judicial proceedings.

However, the arrest warrant of one of the suspects found its way into the hands of right-wing groups who then posted it online, where it was widely shared, spelling out the full names of the suspects, victim, eye-witnesses and the judge.

National Interior Minister Horst Seehofer called the release “completely unacceptable”, and prosecutors said they had launched an investigation on suspicion of breach of official secrets rules.

The right-wing “Citizens Movement Pro Chemnitz”, which had also shared the warrant, complained on Facebook that “the internet police” had deleted the document which it said showed how the suspects had “slaughtered” the German man.Saxony has been a stronghold of far-right parties and groups that bitterly oppose Chancellor Angela Merkel for her 2015 decision to keep open German borders to a mass influx of migrants and refugees.

Saxony police last week apologised for obstructing a TV crew at a right-wing anti-Merkel rally at the instigation of a nationalist protester who turned out to be an off-duty police employee.

The latest controversy comes as the mood remains highly charged following what have been labelled as “pogrom-like” scenes in Chemnitz on Sunday in which extremists assaulted immigrants from Afghanistan, Syria and Bulgaria.

On Monday night some 7,000 protesters, most of them football hooligans and right-wing nationalists, again took to the city’s streets and clashed with anti-fascist protesters, leaving some 20 people injured.

Published in Dawn, August 30th, 2018

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