Nazi procession in Hitleri fashion in Germany
03 May 2019, 22:02 BDT


On May 1, on World Labor Day, in a small town in Germany, neo-Nazis carried out a procession 74 years ago in Hitler's NSDP or the National Socialist German Workers Party.
In the eastern part of Germany, in the small town of Saxena, on May 1, about 300 neo-Nazi Hitleri festivals held half-day procession and meetings with flags and torches. Two days after the incident, various political parties and media in Germany criticized the local administration for permitting such a procession.
A small group of local neo-Nazis named 'Third Path' in the town of Wayne, on 1 May, around 300 people from different parts of Germany, on World Workers' Day, perform various programs across the city from morning till afternoon. After the yellow t-shirts, the neo-Nazis carried out a proclamation with Hitler's National Socialist German Workers Party in the hands of big drums, flags, festoons and torches. The local police administration followed the procession with 1300 police, so that the neo-Nazis did not cause any unrest.
After Hitler became the Chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933, his team of German Socialist Workers Party of Germany organized such a procession for power and terrorism.
In the Saxen state parliament, leftist leader Rico Gobert and Leader Janina Faw criticized such a procession in her state, "In our rule, the incident took place in the town of Plain, despite the ban on the same color, flags, drums, and torches in the imitation of Hitler's party. The leaders of the Social Democratic, Environmental Green Party and Christian Democrat Party of this state also criticized the rally.
Saxane State Minister of State Roland Wolf said that if all parties are allowed to procession or rally in Germany, the Neo-Nazi party named 'Third Path' in the town of Wayne Town has misused the law's law. "Our main task to prevent the neo-Nazis is to create resistance against them socially," he said.
However, all the leaders of the party demanded a clear statement from the home minister in the state parliament on this issue. Several political leaders and media criticized Hitler's campaign of neo-Nazis, saying that police could prevent such a procession if desired.
In September last year, about seven thousand neo-Nazi and racist conservatives protested against refugees, immigrants and chancellor Angela Merkel and rioting in attacks on reporters. The police later sentenced some members of the neo-Nazis to the law and punished them. According to the German Interior Ministry, there are about 12,000 violent neo-Nazis in Germany.
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