German far-right candidate attended neo-Nazi rally in Greece
AfD member Andreas Kalbitz acknowledges being at 2007 event but denies he was there with extremist delegation that hung up swastika flag
BERLIN — A regional leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany party on Friday dismissed new reports of ties to extremists groups that opponents say should disqualify him from being elected in a weekend vote.
Andreas Kalbitz, the party’s leader in the eastern state of Brandenburg, confirmed in a statement reports by weekly Der Spiegel that he attended a 2007 far-right event in Athens, saying he took part out of “curiosity.”
But Kalbitz denied being part of a delegation that included members of Germany’s NPD party, which German authorities have tried unsuccessfully to ban on the grounds of extremism.
Der Spiegel quoted a German police report saying the NPD delegation in Greece draped a swastika flag on a balcony, whereupon Greek anarchists firebombed the hotel.
Kalbitz, whose AfD party could come first in the September 1 regional election in Brandenburg, said in an email that any suggestion he was linked to the flag incident was “simply a lie.”
Earlier this week, public broadcaster rbb reported that the 46-year-old attended a camp organized by the HJ, a neo-Nazi youth movement, in 1993. Kalbitz has previously acknowledged attending a camp by the group’s successor organization in 2007, but downplayed this and other ties to known extremist groups, insisting that he abides by the German Constitution.
Auf einem Lager der rechtsextremen HDJ war Brandenburgs AfD-Chef Andreas Kalbitz schon. Jetzt tauchen neue E-Mails an ihn auf – vom HDJ-Chef und von Horst Mahler.https://t.co/KhOmT05RQL pic.twitter.com/xeUzzBZtfO
— Alexander Fröhlich (@alx_froehlich) August 23, 2019
Germany’s finance minister criticized Kalbitz on Friday.
“Whoever surrounds themselves with neo-Nazis and marches with right-wing radicals abroad, puts the boot into our democratic values,” Olaf Scholz said on Twitter.
“The evidence against AfD’s chief in Brandenburg weighs heavily,” added Scholz, who is running to lead the center-left Social Democrats, urging Brandenburgers to vote against him.
Recent polls put the ruling Social Democrats neck-and-neck with AfD in Brandenburg, though other parties have made clear they won’t consider working with the far right. A separate regional election takes place Sunday in the neighboring state of Saxony, where AfD is challenging Chancellor Angela Merkel’s center-right Christian Democrats for first place.