German police officers suspended over neo-Nazi chat groups

Dozens of officers suspected of sharing offensive images including one of refugee in gas chamber

epa08673040 (FILE) - Herbert Reul (C), Interior Minister of North Rhine-Westphalia, presents North Rhine-Westphalia's unit for arrests and securing evidence 'BFE' (Beweissicherungs- und Festnahmeeinheiten) in Bochum, Germany, 04 February 2019.(Reissued 16 September 2020). German Interior Minister Herbert Reul said on 16 September 2020 that more than 30 police stations and private apartments have been raided and several mobile phones have been confiscated after right wing extremist police officers have been found spreading Nazi propaganda in chat groups. At least 29 police officer have been suspended and will undergo disciplinary measures according to Reul. The minister added that neo Nazis and right-wing extremists have no police in the German police force, promising that he will exert all the necessary efforts to remove the  involved police officers from the service.  EPA/FRIEDEMANN VOGEL *** Local Caption *** 54957220
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Police in Germany have raided the homes and workplaces of fellow officers over their links to a far-right chat groups.

Twenty-nine officers have been suspended from the police force in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia over the private chat groups, in which images of Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and a refugee in a gas chamber were shared.

The Interior Minister of the western state, Herbert Reul, said the 126 images shared across five WhatsApp chat groups on private phones between 2013 and 2015 were "the worst” and “obnoxious".

"Right-wing extremists and neo-Nazis have no place in the North Rhine-Westphalian police force, in our police force," Mr Reul said.

"At first I did not want to believe that there really was such a thing."

Frank Richter, Essen's regional police chief, said the episode was particularly shocking because no officer reported the offensive material to their superiors, Deutche Welle TV reported.

None of the accused officers had seemed in any way suspicious.

ESSEN, GERMANY - SEPTEMBER 17: Police cars are seen in front of a police station on September 17, 2020 in Muelheim, Germany. A total of 29 police officers working in the Essen jurisdiction, many of them in nearby Muelheim, have been suspended after they were found to be participating in far-right online chat groups. Memes the officers shared included ones showing the Nazi swastika, a refugee in a gas chamber and the shooting of a Black man. The suspensions come on top of a string of right-wing cases among police in Germany, including a small group that had sent threatening emails to human rights activists and left-wing politicians and signed them with "Heil Hitler" and NSU 2.0, the latter a reference to a former far-right domestic terror group. (Photo by Lukas Schulze/Getty Images)
Germany's police forces have come under heightened scrutiny in recent years over suspected links to the far-right. Getty Images

All 29 are being investigated and 14 are likely to lose their jobs because of their involvement in the WhatsApp groups, Mr Reul said.

Eleven of those involved in distributing the material face criminal prosecution under Germany’s incitement laws. The rest could face disciplinary action.

Germany’s security services have been dogged by suspicions of far-right infiltration in recent years.

At least 40 cases of far-right extremism among police were being investigated, German media reported in August.

In July, an elite unit of Germany's Special Commando Forces was formally disbanded after some of its members were found to hold extremist views.

Police seized weapons, explosives and ammunition during a raid on the private property of a commando sergeant major in the eastern state of Saxony.

Investigators uncovered 2 kilograms of plastic explosives and an AK-47, an SS songbook and other items of Nazi memorabilia.

Military counter-intelligence in Germany has investigated about 600 troops feared to be involved in far-right extremism.