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PROTESTS

Thousands protest anti-Semitism in Berlin

Several thousand people turned out to demonstrate against anti-Semitism and racism in Berlin on Sunday as the Israel-Hamas war stirred painful memories of the past in Germany.

People take part in a demonstration against anti-Semitism on December 10, 2023 at Brandenburger Gate in Berlin.
People take part in a demonstration against anti-Semitism on December 10, 2023 at Brandenburger Gate in Berlin. (Photo by MICHELE TANTUSSI / AFP)

Around 3,200 people braved the rain to attend the protest march in the heart of the city, according to a police spokeswoman.

Demonstrators rallied under the slogan “never again is now”, a reference to the Holocaust and the crimes committed by the Nazi government.

Anti-Semitism had become “commonplace” in society, Josef Schuster, president of the Central Council of Jews in Germany told the crowd at the protest.

“Sometimes I do not recognise this country,” Schuster said.

Germany has registered hundreds of criminal offences linked to the war in Gaza since the conflict was triggered by Hamas’s October 7 attack on Israel.

Among those cases were an increasing number of anti-Semitic incidents, including the targeting of a Berlin synagogue with Molotov cocktails in October.

People take part in a rally against anti-Semitism on December 10, 2023 in Berlin.

People take part in a rally against anti-Semitism on December 10, 2023 in Berlin. The banner reads ‘Never again is now! Germany stands up’. (Photo by MICHELE TANTUSSI / AFP)

On Sunday, Berlin police said authorities were investigating an incident in the capital in which a swastika was daubed on the door of a house displaying an Israeli flag.

“If you speak Hebrew on the street, I always turn around to see who is behind me,” Nadine Meshulam, an Israeli woman living in Berlin told AFP at the protest.

“Lately you worry more simply about everyday life,” Meshulam said.

A pro-Palestinian demonstration was also held in the centre of Berlin on Sunday, drawing up to 2,500 people at its peak, according to police.

Israel on Saturday counted 137 hostages who remain in Gaza, out of around 240 taken on October 7 during attacks that killed about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, according to Israeli officials.

Israel’s retaliatory bombardment and ground offensive targeting Hamas has killed at least 17,997 people in Gaza, most of them women and children, according to the latest toll from the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry.

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PROTESTS

German climate activist marks two months of hunger strike

A climate activist staging a hunger strike outside the German chancellery on Tuesday vowed to intensify his protest as he marked 62 days without food.

German climate activist marks two months of hunger strike

Wolfgang Metzeler-Kick, 49, began his protest in early March under the motto “Starving until you tell the truth”, and has since been joined by three other activists.

He and his fellow protesters want Chancellor Olaf Scholz to acknowledge that “the climate catastrophe threatens the survival of human civilisation” and are calling for a “radical change of course” to reduce emissions in Europe’s largest economy.

Metzeler-Kick, an environmental protection engineer and longtime activist, told AFP he was willing “to put (his) life in danger”.

He stopped eating 62 days ago and wants to go further: “I’m going to intensify my hunger strike. As of tomorrow, I will temporarily stop drinking,” he said.

Richard Cluse, a 57-year-old engineer, joined the protest 44 days ago, and Michael Winter, a 61-year-old biologist, joined after 22 days.

READ ALSO: Europe warned it must do more to deal with climate crisis

A fourth activist, Adrien Lack, 34, joined on Tuesday with a placard reading: “I will only talk to the chancellor.”

A doctor told a press conference on Tuesday that Winter was in a “very critical” condition and his body mass index had fallen below 16 kg/m2 — considered severely underweight.

Climate activists have resorted to some eye-catching stunts to get their message across in Germany over the past two years.

Protesters from the radical group known as Letzte Generation (“Last Generation”) have repeatedly sat down on busy roads and glued their hands to the tarmac.

Protesters have also thrown mashed potatoes over a Claude Monet painting in Potsdam and glued themselves to an exhibition of a dinosaur skeleton at Berlin’s Natural History Museum.

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