He may at our German homeland and our German culture, "wrote a banner.
Thousands of people demonstrated Monday night in Dresden, responding to the call of Islamophobic, xenophobic movement Pegida, in order to denounce the massive arrival of refugees in Europe.
The focused - mostly men - were holding placards with slogans against refugees and German flags. The police did not give any estimate for the number of people who swarmed the Noimarkt, the main tourist town square.
"We are entitled to our German homeland and our German culture," wrote a banner.
"Muslims must leave Germany, in addition to war refugees but they are not many," argued a man who said that participates in the mobilizations of Pegida from the beginning, in October 2014.
"I am not right, but I'm afraid. I'm afraid Islamization, I think of my children and my grandchildren," said AFP another man who said that his name is Frank.
The founder of Pegida Lutz Bachman, who was charged in Germany for inciting hatred, will be the last speaker in the concentration.
Initial concentrations Pegida in Dresden, who always organized on Mondays, gathered thousands of people. After the attacks against the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris last January, protesters even reached 25,000. But then the popularity of the movement began to wane, especially when posted a photo of Bachman disguised in Adolf Hitler.
In recent weeks, however, the protests begin again to swell. According to German media last week, on 28 September, from 7000 to 10,000 Germans gathered in Dresden to protest against immigrants, Chancellor Angela Merkel and the government's policy towards refugee crisis.
One placard read: "Guilty! Merkel commits the ethnocide of the German people."
Thousands of people demonstrated Monday night in Dresden, responding to the call of Islamophobic, xenophobic movement Pegida, in order to denounce the massive arrival of refugees in Europe.
The focused - mostly men - were holding placards with slogans against refugees and German flags. The police did not give any estimate for the number of people who swarmed the Noimarkt, the main tourist town square.
"We are entitled to our German homeland and our German culture," wrote a banner.
"Muslims must leave Germany, in addition to war refugees but they are not many," argued a man who said that participates in the mobilizations of Pegida from the beginning, in October 2014.
"I am not right, but I'm afraid. I'm afraid Islamization, I think of my children and my grandchildren," said AFP another man who said that his name is Frank.
The founder of Pegida Lutz Bachman, who was charged in Germany for inciting hatred, will be the last speaker in the concentration.
Initial concentrations Pegida in Dresden, who always organized on Mondays, gathered thousands of people. After the attacks against the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris last January, protesters even reached 25,000. But then the popularity of the movement began to wane, especially when posted a photo of Bachman disguised in Adolf Hitler.
In recent weeks, however, the protests begin again to swell. According to German media last week, on 28 September, from 7000 to 10,000 Germans gathered in Dresden to protest against immigrants, Chancellor Angela Merkel and the government's policy towards refugee crisis.
One placard read: "Guilty! Merkel commits the ethnocide of the German people."
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