MUNICH, Germany: Hundreds of thousands joined rallies against the far-right AfD party in Germany on Sunday, capping a week-long wave of protest that has seen demonstrators turn out in unusually large numbers across the country.
Between Friday and Sunday alone, protests were organized in some 100 locations, with organizers Campact and Fridays for Future estimating that over 1.4 million people had gone out into the streets to send a “signal against the AfD and the rightwards drift in German society.”
The influx of demonstrators was so large in Munich on Sunday that organizers were forced to cancel a planned march and ask people to disperse for safety reasons.
Around 100,000 had turned up for the protest, according to local police, four times as many as were registered for the event.
Another 100,000 people gathered to protest in Berlin on Sunday evening, according to police figures cited by regional broadcaster RBB.
The wave of mobilization against the far-right party was sparked by a January 10 report by investigative outlet Correctiv, which revealed that AfD members had discussed the expulsion of immigrants and “non-assimilated citizens” at a meeting with extremists.
Among the participants at the talks was Martin Sellner, a leader of Austria’s Identitarian Movement, which subscribes to the “great replacement” conspiracy theory that claims there is a plot by non-white migrants to replace Europe’s “native” white population.
News of the gathering sent shockwaves across Germany at a time when the AfD is soaring in opinion polls, just months ahead of three major regional elections in eastern Germany where their support is strongest.
The anti-immigration party confirmed the presence of its members at the meeting, but has denied taking on the “remigration” project championed by Sellner.
Protests against the AfD and the far-right thinking behind the deportation plan first came together last weekend in Berlin and Potsdam, where the extremist meeting was held, and have gathered pace since.
On Sunday, demonstrators in the capital carried signs with slogans such as “no place for Nazis,” and waved their phone lights together in front of the German parliament.
“It’s good that something finally happened, that the silent majority isn’t so silent anymore,” IT worker Lydia Steffenhagen told AFP at the protest in Berlin.
In Dresden, the capital of the eastern region of Saxony, where the far-right party is leading in the polls, authorities had to alter the course of a protest march.
The procession was lengthened to make space for an “enormous number of participants,” police said on X, formerly Twitter.
Organizers estimated 70,000 people had joined a protest in Cologne, while in Bremen, local police said 45,000 people had turned out in the center to demonstrate.
Katrin Delrieux, 53, said she hoped the protests against the far right would “make a lot of people rethink” their positions.
“Some might not be sure whether they will vote for the AfD or not, but after this protest they simply cannot,” she told AFP in Munich.
Politicians, as well as church leaders and Bundesliga football managers have called on people to take a stand against the far right.
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who joined a demonstration last weekend, said any plan to expel immigrants or citizens alike amounted to “an attack against our democracy, and in turn, on all of us.”
He urged “all to take a stand — for cohesion, for tolerance, for our democratic Germany.”
Interior Minister Nancy Faeser went so far as to say in the newspapers of the Funke press group that the far-right meeting was reminiscent of “the horrible Wannsee conference,” where the Nazis planned the extermination of European Jews in 1942.
The protests against the far right could “restore trust in democratic conduct,” Josef Schuster, the head of the Central Council of Jews in Germany, told broadcaster Welt TV.
Jews in the country had felt “huge uncertainty” added to by a wave of anti-Semitic incidents following the start of the Israel-Hamas war, Schuster said.