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LEARN HEBREW

Germany bans extreme-right groups for denying Holocaust
Updated: 07/May/2008 12:19
Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble (picture) said the groups outlawed were the 'Collegium Humanum' and the 'Association for the Rehabilitation of Those Persecuted for Questioning the Holocaust.'
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BERLIN (AFP)---Germany on Wednesday banned two regional far-right organizations suspected of denying the Nazis' extermination of six million Jews and launched early-morning raids against their members.

 
Interior Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the groups outlawed were the Collegium Humanum and the Association for the Rehabilitation of Those Persecuted for Questioning the Holocaust (VRBHV)".
  
Based in Germany's most populous state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), the neo-Nazi groups are "collecting pools for organised Holocaust deniers," the ministry said in a statement.
  
"The groups' activities consist of publishing anti-Semitic propaganda and glorifying the National Socialists' (Nazis') brutal dictatorship.
 
"This right-wing extremist ideology was disseminated on the Internet, flyers and at sites run by the organizations in Vlotho, NRW where Holocaust deniers and neo-Nazis from across the country met."
  
Police searched 30 sites linked to the groups and confiscated suspicious material.
  
Schaeuble said the organizations drew young skinheads as well as elderly Nazis who reject Germany's democratic system.
  
"This is the hotbed from which racist-motivated violence grows," he said in the statement.
  
Collegium Humanum was founded in 1963 and is one of the most high-profile groups to dispute the overwhelming historical evidence of Germany's systematic murder of Jews across Europe during World War II.
  
Authorities say Collegium Humanum and VRBHV jointly hold lectures and member events to spread their neo-Nazi ideology.
  
Denying the Holocaust is illegal in Germany. The bans mean the organizations must disband and that its members are barred from setting up successor groups with a similar bent.
 

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