German intel puts part of far-right party under surveillance
BERLIN — Germany’s domestic intelligence agency says it is formally placing parts of the far-right Alternative for Germany party under surveillance after classifying it as extremist.
Thomas Haldenwang, head of Germany’s BfV intelligence agency, said Thursday that a radical faction within the AfD known as “The Wing” is considered a proven extremist organization.
The Wing is led by AfD’s regional chiefs in the eastern states of Thuringia, Bjoern Hoecke, and Brandenburg, Andreas Kalbitz.
Hoecke is well known for his far-right positions, and notoriously called Berlin’s memorial to the victims of the Nazi Holocaust a “monument of shame.”