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September 17, 1993 - Image 128

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1993-09-17

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

only at Footloose

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FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL

WOMEN'S & CHILDREN'S FOOTWEAR

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.11•=19 ■ 1111.11111 ■

Neo-Nazi Incidents
Are Up In Germany

Bonn (JTA) — Incidents of
neo-Nazi violence in Ger-
many were up 76 percent in
1992 over the previous year,
the Interior Ministry has re-
ported.
The report also showed
that 17 people were killed in
1992 as a result of the neo-
Nazis' xenophobic violence
against asylum- seekers and
foreign workers.
The report was prepared
by the Internal Security
Service, which maintains
surveillance of extremist
groups.
The report said that there
had been a total of 2,584
violent incidents by neo-
Nazis in the time since the
security service has been
tracking their activities.
The high number of
violent incidents indicates
that the problem of right-
wing extremism has taken
on "new dimensions, " said
the report.
Previous reports had
tended to play down neo-
Nazi violence, concentrating
instead on left-wing terror-
ism.
The latest report found
that the number of far-right
groups considered dangerous
increased to 82 even though
some were banned last year.
The report was applauded
by the Simon Wiesenthal
Center in Los Angeles. "We
are pleased to see that the
government seems to finally
be convinced that it must
treat the threat of the far
right the way extreme-left
groups were previously dealt
with," said Rabbi Abraham
Cooper, the center's associ-
ate dean.
"Better police surveil-
lance, infiltration and other
pro- active policies are exact-
ly the measures that need to
be taken if the tide of Nazi-
inspired death and mayhem
is to be stopped," he said.
Earlier this year, the
Wiesenthal Center conclud-
ed a six- month undercover
operation inside Germany's
neo-Nazi movement, finding
it far more extensive than
previous official reports had
maintained.
Meanwhile, German ex-
perts are divided on whether
the bans on several par-
ticularly violent neo-Nazi
organizations have helped
the authorities in their fight
against right-wing ex-
tremism.
For example, the mayor of
Dolgenbrot, a town near

Janet Reno:
Strongly backs the bill.

Berlin, has repeatedly de-

nied that town residents
hired neo-Nazis to firebomb
a local hostel for asylum-
seekers last November.
But he confirmed that the
residents had strong feelings
against the construction of
the hostel, and that they
were angry that the refugees
had been assigned to live in
their town.
According to local reports,
young neo-Nazis had been
paid some $1,200, allegedly
collected by the town's
residents, to burn down the
hostel.
The arson attack made it
impossible for state au-
thorities to send the asylum-
seekers to Dolgenbrot.

Attacks
Continue

Tel Aviv (JTA) — The
Muslim fundamentalist
group Hezbollah showed last
week that it has not yet join-
ed on the Middle East peace
bandwagon.
The group admitted
responsibility for virtually
all the daily attacks against
Israeli and allied forces.
But despite shootings,
mortar firings and roadside
bombs aimed at the Israel
Defense Force and its allied
South Lebanon Army, most
explosives have been
discovered and exploded
harmlessly.
The Iranian-backed Hez-
bollah's stated goal is to
force the IDF and the SLA
out of sovereign Lebanese
territory.
Israel has always said that
its forces will leave Lebanon
when it can be assured of
freedom from terrorist in-
filtration from that unstable
country. 0

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