Dubai Telegraph - In Germany's industrial east, old traumas boost far right

EUR -
AED 4.100593
AFN 77.415121
ALL 99.401365
AMD 432.532608
ANG 2.013835
AOA 1036.608223
ARS 1074.850088
AUD 1.637751
AWG 2.009578
AZN 1.914553
BAM 1.956452
BBD 2.256112
BDT 133.534528
BGN 1.965976
BHD 0.420727
BIF 3238.922016
BMD 1.116432
BND 1.442855
BOB 7.721436
BRL 6.05754
BSD 1.117453
BTN 93.463755
BWP 14.702639
BYN 3.656854
BYR 21882.072714
BZD 2.252301
CAD 1.514161
CDF 3205.277492
CHF 0.944965
CLF 0.037663
CLP 1039.241885
CNY 7.876433
CNH 7.87576
COP 4650.21956
CRC 578.846357
CUC 1.116432
CUP 29.585455
CVE 110.298816
CZK 25.095144
DJF 198.982787
DKK 7.459215
DOP 67.07696
DZD 147.738594
EGP 54.183251
ERN 16.746484
ETB 128.59903
FJD 2.455368
FKP 0.850229
GBP 0.839942
GEL 3.047851
GGP 0.850229
GHS 17.599632
GIP 0.850229
GMD 76.471646
GNF 9655.133082
GTQ 8.637648
GYD 233.733753
HKD 8.697404
HNL 27.718995
HRK 7.590635
HTG 147.256466
HUF 394.390564
IDR 16847.577163
ILS 4.213968
IMP 0.850229
INR 93.351322
IQD 1463.774994
IRR 46993.458659
ISK 152.291985
JEP 0.850229
JMD 175.556968
JOD 0.791213
JPY 158.635534
KES 144.142696
KGS 94.087347
KHR 4535.390482
KMF 492.737717
KPW 1004.78842
KRW 1485.278958
KWD 0.340423
KYD 0.931202
KZT 535.183667
LAK 24674.006694
LBP 100063.3742
LKR 340.140375
LRD 223.480517
LSL 19.469018
LTL 3.296534
LVL 0.675319
LYD 5.32268
MAD 10.836419
MDL 19.499328
MGA 5034.588624
MKD 61.635001
MMK 3626.1285
MNT 3793.636842
MOP 8.970411
MRU 44.23275
MUR 51.210562
MVR 17.148494
MWK 1937.602717
MXN 21.565285
MYR 4.675062
MZN 71.284504
NAD 19.469018
NGN 1805.851919
NIO 41.123344
NOK 11.71286
NPR 149.533808
NZD 1.788076
OMR 0.42978
PAB 1.117453
PEN 4.195005
PGK 4.43644
PHP 62.007205
PKR 310.777563
PLN 4.276075
PYG 8722.752395
QAR 4.073749
RON 4.97404
RSD 117.056828
RUB 102.904402
RWF 1504.874851
SAR 4.18934
SBD 9.274133
SCR 15.206594
SDG 671.536448
SEK 11.338824
SGD 1.44022
SHP 0.850229
SLE 25.507466
SLL 23411.020982
SOS 638.607227
SRD 33.328879
STD 23107.894155
SVC 9.777173
SYP 2805.069528
SZL 19.454139
THB 36.967864
TJS 11.878054
TMT 3.907513
TND 3.384438
TOP 2.623388
TRY 38.061582
TTD 7.595465
TWD 35.626914
TZS 3044.960797
UAH 46.305211
UGX 4149.309281
USD 1.116432
UYU 45.904073
UZS 14235.619446
VEF 4044334.590166
VES 41.034973
VND 27425.15899
VUV 132.545083
WST 3.123178
XAF 656.164047
XAG 0.035914
XAU 0.000431
XCD 3.017214
XDR 0.828161
XOF 656.164047
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.470913
ZAR 19.560006
ZMK 10049.230311
ZMW 29.080046
ZWL 359.490739
  • BCC

    7.6300

    144.69

    +5.27%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    41.62

    -1.95%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    25.12

    +0.26%

  • RIO

    2.2700

    65.18

    +3.48%

  • NGG

    -1.2200

    68.83

    -1.77%

  • BTI

    -0.3100

    37.57

    -0.83%

  • AZN

    0.3200

    78.9

    +0.41%

  • SCS

    -0.8000

    13.31

    -6.01%

  • BP

    0.3300

    32.76

    +1.01%

  • BCE

    -0.4200

    35.19

    -1.19%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    13.4

    -0.3%

  • RBGPF

    60.5000

    60.5

    +100%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    25.01

    +0.12%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    6.93

    -0.29%

  • RELX

    0.7600

    48.13

    +1.58%

  • VOD

    -0.1700

    10.06

    -1.69%

In Germany's industrial east, old traumas boost far right
In Germany's industrial east, old traumas boost far right / Photo: Raphaelle LOGEROT - AFP

In Germany's industrial east, old traumas boost far right

In the relatively well-off city of Zwickau, in Germany's former communist east, economic uncertainty and a turbulent history have combined to drive support for the far right ahead of a key regional election.

Text size:

"People are afraid of losing everything they've built up again over the years," said Zwickau's mayor, Constance Arndt.

To understand why "the mood is so bad" ahead of Sunday's elections in the state of Saxony, one has to "perhaps delve into the past", she told AFP.

Zwickau residents have "achieved a certain level of prosperity" after a period of painful decline in the wake of German reunification in 1990, she said.

The city owes its revival in part to its status as a hub for automotive manufacturing, with Volkswagen a major employer in the area.

But recent crises, from the coronavirus pandemic to the Ukraine war and high inflation, have triggered a renewed "fear of losing", said Arndt, 47, from her office overlooking a picturesque market square.

As a result, some are voting for the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party "out of protest", the independent mayor in the city of some 90,000 people added.

At the start of the year, thousands of people in Zwickau nevertheless rallied against the far right following revelations that some members of the anti-Islam, anti-immigrant AfD had joined a meeting that discussed plans for mass deportations of asylum seekers.

The rallies, which also took place across Germany, were at the time seen as a rare mobilisation of the so-called silent majority against right-wing extremism.

But it didn't last long.

In early June, the AfD won a municipal election to become the largest group on Zwickau's district council.

Although the AfD fell short of a majority, council discussions are expected to become more challenging, the mayor predicted, particularly regarding cultural funding.

- Swastikas -

On a sweltering day in August, social worker Joerg Banitz pointed out several swastika tags and inscriptions of "NS-Zone", a reference to the Nazi era, daubed onto walls outside the city centre.

"We see that a lot," said the Zwickau native, who was one of the organisers of the demonstrations against the far right early this year.

Banitz believes the AfD's rise is fuelled by more than just protest votes.

The party's "radical language, its way of thinking" now has "an acceptance" among the public, he said, helped by the fact that conservatives from the centre-right CDU party in Saxony have adopted some of their populist stances.

"I think most of the people who vote for the AfD want exactly what the programme says," he added.

The AfD has found fertile ground in a city with an active right-wing extremist scene, Banitz said. It was in Zwickau that the three members of the NSU neo-Nazi cell, who murdered nine people of immigrant origin between 2000 and 2007, hid from the police for years.

Wolfgang Wetzel, a Zwickau city councillor from the Green party, said many locals felt overwhelmed in an increasingly complex world.

And in a region that has lived through two consecutive authoritarian regimes, Nazism and then communist East Germany, there is a resurgence of "nostalgia for the simplicity of dictatorship, where you don't have to make decisions," which benefits the far right, Wetzel said.

- 'Uncertainty' -

But the AfD rejects those interpretations.

"I think people simply don't want to be deceived anymore," said Jonas Duenzel, a candidate for the AfD in the Saxony election, where polls suggest the party is neck-and-neck with the CDU.

The 30-year-old former insurance salesman took aim at the conservatives who he said had co-opted AfD calls for tougher border controls and asylum policies, but done nothing to make that happen during their five years in power.

If people vote for the AfD, "it's not because they're turning away from democracy", as Saxony prime minister Michael Kretschmer from the CDU has claimed, but because "they have a problem with Mr Kretschmer", he said.

The increased populist sentiment has worried Volkswagen, which produces all-electric vehicles at a large plant in Zwickau. The AfD regularly rails against the push towards zero-emissions driving, dismissing it as "a fairy tale".

"The discussions about the future of electric mobility create uncertainty" for the roughly 10,000 workers at the Zwickau plant, said Christian Sommer, VW's head of corporate communications in Saxony.

"And there is indeed a fear," he told AFP, "that these jobs could be threatened if a right-wing populist-conservative government were to emerge from the elections."

A.Krishnakumar--DT