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NSU trial

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  •  The storefront where a bomb exploded 20 years ago, the shop window filled with portraits of people
    Germany's multicultural society

    Racism 'on the rise' 20 years after NSU bombing

    On 9 June 2004, a nail bomb exploded in the heart of a bustling Turkish community in Cologne. German officials quickly rejected the notion that the attack was motivated by racism – and they accused the victims instead

  • In Deutschland sind zahlreiche Moscheen mit Bedrohungen konfrontiert, während die Sicherheitsbehörden im Dunkeln tappen. In der muslimischen Gemeinschaft vermischen sich Ängste mit wachsendem Frust.
    Muslims in Germany

    Anonymous hate mail rattles mosque congregations

    In Germany, numerous mosques are facing threats, yet the security authorities are anything but clued up. Fear, mixed with an increasing sense of frustration, is growing among the country's Muslim community. By Christoph Strack

  • Bullied, insulted, subtly shamed – people with a visible migration background report about their experiences with racism in Germany in a new book.
    'People of Deutschland'

    Everyday racism in Germany

    Bullied, insulted, subtly shamed – people with a visible migration background report about their experiences with racism in Germany in a new book. By Philipp Jedicke

  • On 19 February 2020, a right-wing terrorist murdered nine people in Hanau, Germany: Gokhan Gultekin, Sedat Gurbuz, Said Nesar Hashemi, Mercedes Kierpacz, Hamza Kurtovic, Vili Viorel Paun, Fatih Saracoglu, Ferhat Unvar and Kaloyan Velkov.
    Islamisation, a racist conspiracy theory

    The hatred of Hanau and its enablers

    The Hanau terror attack showed just how dangerous racist conspiracy theories can be. And yet it is a threat that continues to be underestimated. Commentary by Daniel Bax

  • Right-wing terrorist attack in Hanau: a 27-metre-long wall of graffiti in Frankfurt/Main commemorates the victims of the Hanau attack on 19 February 2020.
    Podcast on the Hanau terrorist attack one year on

    "From 1990 to 2020 Germany's far right killed about 200 people"

    On 19 February 2020, a right-wing terrorist murdered nine people in the German city of Hanau: Gokhan Gultekin, Sedat Gurbuz, Said Nesar Hashemi, Mercedes Kierpacz, Hamza Kurtovic, Vili Viorel Paun, Fatih Saracoglu, Ferhat Unvar und Kaloyan Velkov. Journalists Sham Jaff and Aline Jabarine talk to Schayan Riaz about the ongoing search for answers

  • Racist terror in Germany

    ʺNever againʺ? Let’s hope so!

    Nine victims of the right-wing extremist murderer of Hanau had a migration background. The motive for the crime is clear and unambiguous: racism. Sheila Mysorekar from the "Neue deutsche Medienmacher*innen" comments

  • Right-wing extremism

    Halle, Christchurch… a network of "lone wolves"

    Ongoing investigations into the Halle attack have so far concluded that the right-wing extremist attacker acted alone. But "lone wolves" are anything but isolated. By Sandra Petersmann and Naomi Conrad

  • 15 years since the neo-Nazi NSU attack in Cologne

    Germanyʹs constitution turns 70 – sorry, what happened on Keupstrasse?

    Anyone mentioning Cologneʹs Keupstrasse and radicalisation in the same breath cannot simply brush the matter of NSU terrorism under the carpet. Commentary by Sonja Hegasy

  • Verdict in neo-Nazi NSU trial

    The shredding of Germanyʹs democracy

    For those of us with a migrant background, the recent NSU trial verdict does not put the matter to rest. We are still left fearing for our lives in this country, says Sheila Mysorekar in her commentary

  • Fatih Akin's film "In the Fade"

    Back in the saddle

    In his latest film, "In the Fade", Fatih Akin puts his leading lady through hell. The acclaimed director draws on the series of murders committed by the NSU terror cell in Germany to produce some of his best work to date. By Jochen Kurten

  • Hate crime report by Germany′s Institute for Human Rights

    Time to stem the tide

    Thanks to the divisive rhetoric of US President-elect Donald Trump, respect for human rights took a battering during the US election campaign. All the more important therefore that Germany and its European partners remain committed to upholding them. By Hugh Williamson

  • German mini-series: ″Mitten in Deutschland: NSU″

    Don't look the other way!

    The NSU neo-Nazi terrorist trial barely makes the headlines anymore. A German TV miniseries on their alleged murders also met with little interest. Sarah Judith Hofmann wonders whether Germans are even interested in the case being solved

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