Hard-left eco-arsonists set fire to Tesla’s Berlin gigafactory

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Hard-left environmentalists set fire to a high-voltage transformer in Tesla’s Berlin-Brandenburg factory, resulting in a major power outage and a forced halt in production.

It was unclear if the fire was an act of sabotage before the environmentalist activists claimed responsibility for the arson.

The militant “Volcano group” said in a statement that it had “sabotaged Tesla”.

“We have eliminated the risk to our lives and the lives of others,” they added, saying they rejected “green capitalism”, while calling Tesla’s owner Elon Musk “a techno-fascist”.

The State Security Service has opened an investigation.

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Brandenburg’s prime minister Dietmar Woidke said “attacks on our critical infrastructure are a form of terrorism.”

The local fire department first responded to the incident, after early morning reports of an explosion. A police aircraft was dispatched afterwards.

Electricity outages were reported in portions of Neukölln, Rahnsdorf, and Müggelheim in Berlin, according to operator Stromnetz Berlin. About 2,000 households were affected.

In a subsequent search, the police found a bomb warning in a protester’s nearby tent.

Workers on the night shift had to evacuate the building, while a bomb squad searched the area.

Workers from the morning shift were meanwhile not allowed in.

The bomb squad’s search of the “Gigafactory”, which Tesla calls “our most advanced, sustainable and efficient facility yet”, was expected to take many hours.

Michael Stübgen, the state of Brandenburg’s interior ministry, denounced the “perfidious attack” against the energy grid.

After consulting with electrical provider EDIS, Tesla indicated all necessary precautions had been taken to protect its production facilities, and said it did not anticipate a rapid restart of production.

In 2021, there was previous suspicion the “Volcano Group” had engaged in an arson attack on the Tesla construction site’s power supply.

On left-wing website Indymedia.org, the group criticised Tesla for not being socially, ecologically, or environmentally conscious.

The same Volcano group has been targeting radio masts, power cables and fibre optics cables for over a decade, calling these part of the surveillance state.

Environmentalists have meanwhile protested against an expansion of the Tesla gigafactory, and have occupied areas of a nearby forest.

Since last week Wednesday, green protesters built around twelve treehouses several meters above the ground in the woods.

The protesters, numbering between 60 and 100 persons, belong to the “Stop Tesla” initiative and the “Robin Wood” group.

The demonstrators say they want to prevent the Tesla expansion project from destroying the forest.

Tesla intends to expand its 300-hectare manufacturing complex by adding a freight station, warehouses, and an employee nursery. This would require clearing of more than 100 hectares of woodland.

The police have not to this point forced the environmentalist activists to leave the camp.

Die Welt notes in security circles, the radicalisation of the climate scene is an issue being watched with enormous concern.

Left-wing extremist groups and “join-in campaigns” are being mobilised around climate change. There have been a number of attacks by such bodies on infrastructure and companies.

In February, activists set fire to two Tesla vehicles and charging stations in Berlin in the name of the “Switch Off” campaign. They wrote in a confession letter: “Let the air out of the tyres of fat cars? Great. Even better: setting Teslas on fire everywhere! A few barbecue lighters and spring can begin!”

Tesla, owned by Elon Musk, employs around 12,500 people in the Berlin area.

Tesla Model Y, Europe’s most-sold vehicle in 2023, is built in Berlin. The company also makes its batteries there.

Tesla is hoping to produce a million vehicles annually in Berlin, once the facility’s expansion is complete.

https://brusselssignal.eu/2024/03/hard-left-eco-arsonists-set-fire-to-teslas-berlin-gigafactory/

South Africa: White student sentenced for “disrespecting LGBT”

Shaun Christie , screen grab youtube

The disciplinary hearing of Shaun Christie, the senior student from North West University (NWU) who was temporarily suspended earlier this month following his public objection to the content of a session at an orientation event, will take place at the university’s Potchefstroom campus tomorrow. AfriForum Youth’s legal team will assist Christie at the hearing and will also insist that all charges against him be withdrawn.

According to the charge sheet, Christie is charged with five separate counts of misconduct. The university argues, among other things, that Christie intentionally made himself “guilty of hate speech by inciting that the students must stand up against the LGBTQIAP + Community”. In addition, he is charged with intentionally disrupting a university programme; infringement of the rights of the speaker of the relevant session, Chloe Valerie van der Walt; being guilty of treating the LGBTQIAP + community with hostility; and that he wrongfully and intentionally made a false statement regarding the university’s alleged intolerance of Christian values.

According to Ronald Peters, AfriForum Youth Manager, the university ignores Christie’s right to freedom of speech and freedom of association with these charges. “The attempt to extend a charge of misconduct now to include a much more serious charge of hate speech is unacceptable. Our legal representative will assist Christie and ensure that this witch hunt is brought to an end,” emphasises Peters.

“So far, the university has in no way accepted responsibility for the blatantly biased way in which the orientation programme was put together. An LGBTQIAP + association was the only one allowed to host a session as part of the official programme and this created the breeding ground for discontent. Christie stood up for what he believed in and is now being punished for it,” concludes Peters.

Christie’s temporary suspension was partially lifted on 13 February. The university’s disciplinary committee thereby gave this fourth-year law student permission to participate in academic proceedings again. However, he is still not allowed to attend any of the university’s public events.

Shaun Christie charged with `hate speech` – AfriForum – POLITICS | Politicsweb

Anti-Antisemitism as Europeanism by Proxy 

The conflict between Israel and Hamas following the latter’s 7 October 2023 terror attack has caused uproar and reaction in Europe. Antisemitism is clearly on the rise particularly among left-wing progressives, while a strong pro-Israel force is defending the Jewish state and fighting the recent surge of antisemitism.

The conflict between Jews and Muslims is indeed steeped in antisemitism; however, in Europe, this term is now used to hide a deeper culture war. On the one hand, it simply conceals a more fundamental anti-Western cultural revolution, and on the other it allows for a newfound national and European courage to mask itself as a progressive crusade against a new Holocaust.

Thus, Israel, for each side, embodies either the confident West or the colonial oppressor. Europe is simply dealing with its own cultural issues by projecting them on the current conflict in the Middle East. This makes for an unsustainable situation as it highlights the mental acrobatics still needed to simply stand up for European values.

Antisemitism as Anti-Western Sentiment

The main reason for the politcization of the conflict between Israel and Hamas is therefore relatively straight forward: it reflects the culture war taking place in Europe and the West overall. The left-wing progressives’ embracing of Palestine and by extension Hamas coupled with an equally keen rejection of Israel should not primarily be seen as an outburst of antisemitism, but of anti-Western sentiment. That is, Israel is not being opposed because it is a Jewish state, but rather because it is a Western one. In a recent talk titled “The Left’s Long War on Israel,” social scientist Nikos Sotirakopoulos stated that the Left would probably be just as hostile to Israel if it were a Christian state. Even if one disagrees with his assessment, this thought experiment highlights a certain truth, namely that left-wing antisemitism is anti-Western at its core.

This anti-Western sentiment springs from an alliance between Palestinians and Western left-wingers, progressives, academics, and journalists which goes back decades, and is grounded in the belief that the Palestinian fight against Israel is part of the same ‘anti-colonial,’ ‘anti-racist,’ and ‘anti-imperialist’ struggle that the Left are fighting against Western cultural expressions at home.

This is clearly visible in my native Finland, where all the usual suspects on the Left—the local variations of BLM, Extinction Rebellion, and Antifa—have emerged to protest Israel. Even the “student movement against welfare cuts” has—naturally—joined in to “stop the genocide.” All of the groups and activists who have spent the past months protesting the new Finnish right-wing government are now on the streets protesting Israel. Again, they see the Palestinian struggle against Israel as part of the same ‘anti-colonial,’ ‘anti-racist,’ and ‘anti-fascist’ fight that they as activists are conducting against ‘right-wing extremism’ at home. We have reached a point where left-wing progressive forces and their enablers now see more reason to protest a liberal Western government than a Muslim terrorist organization.

The Unholy Alliance of Decolonization

The current anti-Israel protests ought therefore to be seen as a fundamental anti-European exercise directed at all the ills from which the West supposedly suffers: racism, nationalism, colonialism, and right-wing extremism, now embodied by Israel in its ‘genocide’ of ‘oppressed’ Muslims. The protests and revolts taking place display a lot of commonalities with the BLM-riots in the U.S. during the summer of 2020. Then, as now, the problem was both ‘colonialism’ and law enforcement with the solution being ‘decolonization’ and ‘defunding’ of those who uphold order (the police)—now seen in calls for ‘armistice.’ In the minds of cultural revolutionaries, the ‘privilege’ inherent in ‘whiteness’ has now simply been transferred to the Jews. The expression of anger towards the structural racism of the police, supposedly exemplified during George Floyd’s death, turns out to be equally applicable to the supposed racism of Israeli colonialism in Gaza.

Over the past decade, calls for ‘decolonization’ of education, museums, government, urban spaces, art, and entertainment have become frequent, but it is increasingly clear that decolonization can also be mobilized as direct violence against nations. As American journalist Najma Sharif put it on X (formerly Twitter) after the Hamas terrorist attack: “what did y’all think decolonization meant? vibes? papers? essays? losers.” Such remarks put the decolonization efforts by our own homegrown cultural revolutionaries in a new light, and illustrate how and why they choose to ally themselves with anti-Western forces, foreign belief-systems, and politicians who call for mass-immigration.

Hamas is clearly aware of this connection and uses it well for propaganda purposes. In a 2021 interview, Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar stated that Israel’s conduct towards the Palestinians was “the same type of racism that killed George Floyd.” It mirrors a statement made by Iran’s foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif the year before. Zarif criticized French president Emmanuel Macron for fuelling extremism, stating that “Muslims are the primary victims of the ‘cult of hatred’—empowered by colonial regimes.” This was after a teacher in France had been beheaded by an Islamist for showing cartoons of Muhammad, and Macron had defended the teacher’s right to freedom of speech.

Europeanism Hiding Behind Left-Wing Tropes 

In all of this, a new resistance is brewing—primarily in the name of fighting antisemitism. However, as much as the real problem on the left of the political spectrum isn’t just antisemitism, the real goal on the right isn’t simply combating it.

Instead, Israel, much like Ukraine, now functions as a proxy for a newfound European spirit that is still shrouded in a veil of diversion. As it is still taboo to criticize the Left’s ongoing attack on European culture, these two nations are now serving as proxies for European national attachment. Even centrists and progressives can thus reveal their true feelings, as they are now able to transform what would otherwise be regarded as an intolerant culture war into a progressive struggle against antisemitism.

Unsurprisingly, Germany is at the forefront of this nationalism-by-proxy phenomenon, as any piety towards Germany has been unthinkable in the country for at least half a century. In line with this reasoning, CDU leader Friedrich Merz recently stated that immigrants to Germany can only become citizens if they acknowledge Israel’s right to exist, and that they otherwise have no place in Germany. He then added that guaranteeing the security of Israel is the Staatsräson—the founding principle—of Germany.

Apparently, becoming German is not about swearing allegiance to Germany, but instead about supporting another nation that is capable of embodying some notion of the ‘West,’ of which Germany is also a part. At the same time, Israel is a reminder of the worst crimes of Europe, and of Germany in particular, thus making sure that this newfound patriotism is of the right anti-fascist kind. Israel is the creation, outpost, and victim of the West, and therefore the perfect vessel for patriotism by proxy. Championing a culturally, socially, or ethnically cohesive nation state is still impossible in Europe; championing a proxy in the Middle East is the next best thing.

The passionate support for Israel is paired with constant references to the Nazis and slogans like “never again is now.” These are clear symptoms of European defeatism, as they allow the more progressive participants to avoid seeing the struggle through a ‘problematic’ Eurocentric lens, but rather as a continuation of an older struggle against something clearly Western and right-wing. ‘Last time it was the Nazis, now it is Hamas!’—or so the rationalization goes.

Just as the Left today conducts its struggles through ‘anti-ideologies,’ the current rhetoric of ‘anti-antisemitism’ illustrates how even the ‘Right’ has adopted the tactics and the mental space of the Left by itself adopting anti-fascist tropes. Part of this might be polemical—i.e., it is now possible to illustrate the threat to Europe and to criticize Islam by projecting the problem onto the relationship between Israel and Hamas, and thereby avoid being branded far-right. Indeed, the tables are now turned, so that opponents to the ‘right-wing’ view risk being branded Nazis by the Right—that old “the Left are the real Nazis” cliché.

Confidence by Proxy Does Not Win Any Wars

This all goes to show how unpredictable history is and how quickly constellations change. The Left is now forced to pick the side of Hamas, not because they really hate Jews or care about Palestinians, but because they need to double down on their own beliefs and avoid giving in to the critique of their political foes by admitting that the multicultural project in Europe has failed completely. Nor do they wish to admit that the relations between Israel and Gaza presage the future of Europeans and Muslims in Europe.

Left-wing progressives are happy to reinforce the link between what they see as Jewish imperialism and European rightism, in the same way that the Right—instead of defending Europeanism and nationhood—considers it expedient to portray their cause as a fight against antisemitism. For example, it is quite clear that the march against antisemitism in London on Sunday was as much a march for Britain as it was for Israel, with Union Jacks flying and “God Save the King” echoing over the crowds. As self-described conservative Chris Rose put it on X, the event was “a complete contrast to the anti-West hate marches with people who sympathise with our enemies.” Still, organizing such marches without the pretext of protesting antisemitism would be quite taboo.

It may seem tragically poetic that it is in the conflict between Israel and Hamas that an awakening of Europe might occur. However, in the end, confidence by proxy is no confidence at all. At best, it is a mere beginning. But a beginning of what? Clearly Europeans are now waking up to the fact that mass immigration isn’t leading to a multicultural utopia, and that in the face of incontrovertible evidence there are still well-established forces in Europe unwilling to roll back their destructive policies. These forces will, to the bitter end and at whatever cost, see right-wing populism, Jewish imperialism, and European ‘whiteness’ as the real threats, and they will ally with any anti-Western group in their anti-colonial struggle.

Those who care about the future of Europe and their own nations are therefore correct to defend Israel, but that will not be enough. Europeans need to shake off their feelings of demoralization and defeat. They must win over the establishment on their side regardless of the situation in the Middle East, and they must openly declare that their cause is ultimately not about the fate of Israel, but the fate of Europe. In the end, the rhetoric of anti-antisemitism cannot prove sufficient to the challenges at hand.

https://europeanconservative.com/articles/essay/anti-antisemitism-as-europeanism-by-proxy/

Britons are warned about holidaying in Turkey as terrorist attacks are ‘very likely’ – be wary of large public gatherings

Wikimedia Commons , Dennis Jarvis on Flickr, CC-BY-SA-2.0

Britons visiting Turkey have been issued a warning about their safety. Holidaymakers have been urged to “remain aware” of their surroundings.

The Government has provided new information for Britons travelling to Turkey, telling them that there is a “high threat of terrorist attack globally affecting UK interests and British nationals”.

GOV.UK warned Britons travelling to the holiday hotspot that “terrorists are very likely to try to carry out attacks in Turkey”.

The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) advised: “Most terrorist attacks have occurred in southeast Turkey, Ankara and Istanbul. You should remain aware of your surroundings, keep up to date with local media reports and follow the advice of local authorities.

“Attacks could be indiscriminate including in places visited by foreigners, such as public buildings, places of worship, airports and large public gatherings (including major events, public holidays, and religious occasions).

“There have already been two “significant” attacks in Istanbul this year. Britons were warned: “In February 2024, one person was killed in an armed attack on the Çağlayan courthouse by the terrorist group DHKP/C.

“In January 2024, one person was killed by two gunmen in the Santa Maria Catholic Church in Sariyer, in an attack claimed by Daesh.” In 2022, six people were killed in an explosion in central Istanbul.

British holidaymakers were advised that the proximity could be a cause for concern.

The FCDO explained: “Extremist groups based in Syria, including Daesh and Al-Qaeda linked groups, have the capacity to carry out attacks in neighbouring countries, including Turkey. Daesh has previously targeted border crossings and nearby locations on the Syrian side of the border.”

Visitors to Turkey should consult guidance from the UK Counter Terrorism Policing for information and advice on staying safe abroad and what to do if a terrorist attack occurs. GOV.K also has information on how to reduce your risk from terrorism when abroad.

Britons were also given information from the FCDO on the political situation in Turkey. The Government department said: “Occasional demonstrations can occur in cities and may become violent. Police have used tear gas and water cannons to disperse protests.

“Events in Israel and the Occupied Palestinian Territories have led to heightened tensions in the region and demonstrations are ongoing in locations across Turkey. Large demonstrations have been reported outside diplomatic missions connected to the conflict in major cities, particularly Israeli diplomatic missions in Ankara and Istanbul.”

Britons were told that they should “avoid all demonstrations and leave the area if one develops”. They were advised that local transport routes may be disrupted.

Britons in Turkey must also be aware of the types of crime that take place and how tourists might be affected. Visitors should be aware of street robbery and pickpocketing, drink and food spiking, counterfeit alcohol, sexual assault, and issues with vehicle safety.

Britons were warned about sexual assaults taking place: “In 2023, 42 cases of sexual assault, including rape, were reported to British consular staff in Turkey.

“Most sexual assault cases reported to British consular staff in Turkey have happened during summer holidays in coastal tourist areas. Many were committed at night by someone the victim met during the day, including hotel workers. There have also been sexual attacks on minors visiting toilet facilities alone. Be extra vigilant in these situations.”

Turkey isn’t the only popular holiday hotspot British tourists have been warned of in recent days. This comes as hotel guests in Spain could face new restrictions after a drought in Costa Del Sol sparked chaos.

Authorities in Andalusia are reportedly in conversations with hotels to install meters in rooms, in an attempt to cut back on water consumption.

https://www.gbnews.com/travel/turkey-travel-warning-terrorism-british-tourists

First German city to install Ramadan festival lighting

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Frankfurt on the river Main has become the first city in Germany to start putting up decorations for the Islamic festival of Ramadan. Work started on Monday morning, reports the Bild newspaper. Stars and crescent moons are now hung above the streets around the Alte Oper opera house near Frankfurt city centre. Ramadan, the highest Muslim festival, begins on March 10 and ends on April 9.
The Greens and the Social Democrats, as well as the Green-led Department for Diversity and Anti-Discrimination, made the decision to light the crescent back in 2023 against the votes of the Christian Democrats. The argument of the Green-Red coalition: “Between 100,000 and 150,000 Muslims live in Frankfurt am Main, making up almost 15 per cent of the total population.”

The Greens’ motion states: “By decorating the city during Ramadan, the city of Frankfurt is emphasising Muslim life and appreciating the people of the Muslim faith in this city.”

Frankfurt’s Mayor Nargess Eskandari-Grünberg (Greens) defended the installation of the lights to Bild: “They are lights of togetherness, against reservations, against discrimination, against anti-Muslim racism and also against anti-Semitism.” Born in Iran, she took over as acting mayor from November 2022 to May 2023 after Peter Feldmann was voted out of office.

According to the newspaper, the lighting will cost Frankfurt taxpayers between 50,000 and 100,000 euros. This is roughly equivalent to the cost of the Christmas lights in Frankfurt, which amount to 75,000 euros.

Frankfurt appears to be modelled on the British capital London. Mayor Sadiq Khan had Ramadan festive lighting installed in the centre of Piccadilly Circus last year.

Erste deutsche Stadt hängt Ramadan-Festbeleuchtung auf (jungefreiheit.de)

A demonstration by 163 school headmasters in Paris to stop death threats made by Muslim parents: They denounce the aggressiveness of the parents and the false accusations of alleged Islamophobia

The trigger was the incident on Wednesday the 28th of February at the Ravel Lyceum: a headmaster was threatened with death after he reminded female pupils that she must remove her headscarf. According to these headmasters and headmistresses, disputes of this kind are anything but unique.

It is important to show solidarity, confirms Nicolas Bray, representative of the SNPDEN trade union in Paris: “There are colleagues who are regularly threatened in their jobs and we support everyone by means of this campaign. It is the issue of secularism that is under attack. There are recent attacks that can be noted.”

There were 163 school headmasters out of 380 (Paris intra-muros). They had come to react to the death threats received by the headmaster of the Lycée Maurice Ravel. They denounced the attacks by parents and the false accusations of Islamophobia. BFMTV

On Monday, more than 170 head teachers from high schools and secondary schools in Paris, representing around half of the schools in the capital, gathered in Sorbonne Square. They demonstrated their support for the headmaster of the Lycée Ravel, who had received death threats after asking a pupil to take off her headscarf at school. Nicolas Bray, headmaster of the Fénelon high school and academic secretary of SNPDEN-Unsa Paris, the largest union for education management staff, summed up the mobilisation by telling Le Figaro: “It’s not ‘Je suis Charlie’, but we’re here to make the point that it could happen to any of us.”
On Wednesday the 28th of February, the headmaster of the school in the 20th arrondissement of Paris was threatened with death on social media after he asked a pupil to take off her headscarf.

At the weekend, the unions representing school headmasters in Paris called for solidarity and expressed their concern about the death threats received by some colleagues for applying the principles of secularism. They pointed out how quickly the accusations spread via social networks, putting these professionals at risk. The unions declared that such methods were unacceptable and welcomed the support of the Ministry and the Academy of Paris. Kamel Aït Bouali, headmaster of the Collège Thomas Mann (Paris 13e) and academic secretary of the Sgen-CFDT, told our colleagues: “The trigger is Ravel and the violation of secularism. I have no evidence to confirm that it is a provocation, but we are talking about a BTS student who should have known the rules for a long time.”

Another example of the threat to teachers is the threat posed by social networks, such as at the Lycée Colbert (Paris 10e), which was the focus of media attention after Gabriel Attal banned abayas in the school. The high school had been blockaded and banners unfurled to denounce “state Islamophobia” after a teacher spoke about a student wearing a long dress and the education team decided to talk to her about it. “But it went in all kinds of channels on social media,” says Isabelle Brochard, the school’s headmaster.

These social networks are often behind such an escalation of violence because, according to the head of a college in the 11th arrondissement: “Social networks and the information they provide are a source of controversy. The power of the internet is greater than that of the national education system”. At the meeting, many headteachers also reported threats they had received following disciplinary committees. One headmistress of a high school in the 15th arrondissement said she had received threats from a parent who had told her that he knew her address and would track her down.

Lucie Pitiot, headmistress of the Cité scolaire François Villon, shared her experiences after the Ravel case on social media. “You don’t get up in the morning and think you’re going to receive a death threat. But that’s exactly what happened to me on February 12”, after a pupil was expelled from school and a parent came to her colleagues to tell them that he wanted to “kill her”. Despite receiving support and filing a police report, she said she had not been walking alone on the street for 18 days and only travelled by car. Laïcité : la multiplication des menaces de mort envers le corps enseignant dénoncée par les directeurs d’établissements parisiens – Valeurs actuelles

Une manifestation de 163 chefs d’établissements parisiens pour dire stop aux menaces de mort : ils dénoncent l’agressivité des parents et les fausses accusations d’islamophobie – Fdesouche

France: African migrant ‘serial attacker’ beat and robbed 17 elderly women

A homeless migrant from the African country of Djibouti has been arrested after beating and robbing an astounding number of elderly victims, with some of them over the age of 90.

Labeled a serial attacker of the elderly, the 36-year-old man has attacked 17 elderly women in Rennes in recent weeks, often with extreme violence. Due to the series of assaults, police set up surveillance checks around the area of attacks in the hopes of catching the man.

That surveillance eventually paid off. During the last day of the market in Villejean, police officers caught the man in the middle of a vicious assault on a senior who was walking on crutches at the time. Prosecutor Philippe Astruc said the suspect “slammed the head of an 83-year-old woman against the doorknob of her building.”

Just a few minutes before that, police determined the man had attacked a 73-year-old woman and stole her wallet. Shortly before that, at 9:30 a.m., he beat a 78-year-old woman who was using a walker. He was unable to steal the woman’s handbag, but the attacker grabbed her bag of tomatoes and ran off, according to French newspaper Le Telegramme.

In total, the man is being charged with robbing and assaulting 17 different elderly women in the space of weeks.

Among his victims was also a 93-year-old woman named Lillane, who also spoke to other victims who had been targeted by the African.

“I met a lady, he broke her wrist. And I came across another one, she had half of her face affected. She told me, ‘I was looking for you, I wanted to see you, you are the first one he hit!’ He punched her in the face, you should see her face,” said Lillane while speaking with French newspaper Le Telegramme.

She explained that she met “five other victims,” all of them elderly and all of whom had been the victim of extreme brutality by the suspect. Regarding her own experience with the African, Lillane said that he was in his “thirties and well-dressed” and did not hesitate to slam her to the ground and put his hand over her mouth to stop her from screaming.

The man is facing charges for assault, theft, and bodily harm against a vulnerable person.

https://www.rmx.news/crime/france-african-migrant-serial-attacker-beat-and-robbed-17-elderly-women/

Germany: AfD Wins Mayoral Election With 59% of the Vote

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Anti-globalist right-wing party AfD (Alternative für Deutschland) has clinched its third-ever mayoral seat, in a sign that the party is a force to be reckoned with. Rolf Weigand was elected on Sunday, March 3rd, as mayor of Großschirma, an eastern German town near Dresden, with a population of 6,000. Weigand, the AfD’s candidate, won convincingly, getting 59% of the votes in the first round of voting, making a second round unnecessary. An independent candidate came second with 22%, while the centre-right CDU’s candidate only managed to get 18%.

AfD has won mayoral elections in Raguhn-Jeßnitz (9,000 inhabitants) and Pirna (38,000 inhabitants) in recent months—both towns are in the eastern part of Germany, where the party is predicted to become the strongest political force after autumn elections in the states of Brandenburg, Saxony, and Thuringia. The party is also contesting June’s European Parliament elections and polls suggest it could finish second behind the CDU.

The continued electoral successes of AfD are a sign of disenchantment with the current German government, composed of the Social Democrats (SPD), the Greens and the liberal FDP. AfD has evolved from being a fringe party to a serious political force, demanding an end to illegal immigration and to harmful energy and green policies that are destroying the economy. The unpopularity of the federal government has led to the opposition CDU and AfD growing stronger even in left-wing-liberal strongholds such as Berlin.

The rise of the AfD has alarmed the political establishment which is hastily trying to come up with all sorts of ways to fight off the party, with some mainstream politicians even going as far as calling for the party to be banned. In the most recent developments, the domestic intelligence agency, the BfV—which operates under the supervision and direction of Germany’s interior minister—is preparing a dossier to use as a basis for which to justify the classification of the entire AfD as a “verified” right-wing extremist movement.

Not surprisingly, the Left were quick to condemn voters for choosing the right-wing candidate in Großschirma. Detlef Müller, vice chairman of the SPD’s Bundestag parliamentary group, called the election result “shameful,” adding that it “leaves us stunned.” AfD reacted by saying that Müller’s words were arrogant, and are an “incredible delegitimization of a democratic election.”

https://europeanconservative.com/articles/news/afd-wins-mayoral-election-with-59-of-the-vote/