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Polish PM warns of 'lunatics and traitors' on far-right
Polish PM warns of 'lunatics and traitors' on far-right
by AFP Staff Writers
Warsaw (AFP) April 24, 2024

Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Wednesday warned of "lunatics and traitors" on the far-right pushing pro-Russia lines ahead of European elections in June.

"I sometimes get the impression that the Russians better understand the importance of these elections than some of us," said Tusk in a campaign speech urging Poles to vote.

He warned against "radical-right candidates" he said would "stoke sentiment that is anti-Ukrainian, anti-European and increasingly pro-Russian.

"We can't leave Poland and Europe in the hands of lunatics and traitors."

Russian and Belarusian services were trying "more actively" to influence the course of events in Europe, said Tusk.

"We have more and more evidence that the Russians will want to interfere in the (European) electoral process in various ways, including via violence," he warned.

The European Union had to become a fortress against "aggression, chaos and disorder", he argued, referring to the war across the border in Ukraine, where Kyiv is fighting Russian forces.

Arguing for greater European cooperation on security matters, he added: "We need to effectively defend our sky, our territory and our borders against aggression, chaos and disorder."

Tusk has already said Poland plans to join Germany's air-defence project, called the European Sky Shield Initiative, to which some 20 countries have signed up.

Tusk has repeatedly stressed the importance of European security.

In March, he warned of the "real" threat of conflict in Europe, saying that for the first time since the end of World War II, the continent had entered a "pre-war era".

Earlier this month, he urged the EU to think more actively on how to protect countries like his from fall-out from the Ukraine war.

Chinese spying claims deepen German far right's woes
Berlin (AFP) April 24, 2024 - Germany's far-right AfD fought Wednesday to draw a line under Chinese spying allegations, the latest in a slew of scandals to hit the anti-immigration party in a key election year.

An aide to Maximilian Krah, a member of the European Parliament for the AfD and the party's top candidate for June's EU elections, was arrested on Monday on suspicion of spying for China.

The AfD's leaders Alice Weidel and Tino Chrupalla summoned Krah to an emergency meeting in Berlin on Wednesday morning.

The controversial politician will not attend a key event this weekend to officially launch the party's EU vote race "so as not to damage the election campaign and the standing of the party", they said after the talks.

But Krah himself said he would "remain the leading candidate" in the vote.

German media reported that the party will remove Krah from campaign posters and videos, while keeping him on its list of candidates.

An AfD spokesman declined to comment on the reports when contacted by AFP.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz called the allegations "very worrying", without commenting on the case in detail.

After riding high in opinion polls at the end of last year, the AfD has since seen its support hammered by a series of scandals.

- 'Descending into chaos' -

The spying claims come on top of other recent allegations that Krah has links to Russia, piling pressure on the party seven weeks before the EU elections and ahead of key regional polls in Germany in September.

Towards the end of 2023, the AfD was polling at around 22 percent -- ahead of Scholz's Social Democrats (SPD) and second only to the main opposition conservatives.

But one survey this week put it on 16 percent.

In January, an investigation by media group Correctiv indicated members of the AfD had discussed the idea of mass deportations at a meeting with extremists, leading to a wave of protests across the country.

More recently, Krah and another AfD candidate for the EU elections, Petr Bystron, have been forced to deny allegations they accepted money to spread pro-Russian positions on a Moscow-financed news website.

And Bjoern Hoecke, one of the AfD's most controversial politicians and the head of the party in Thuringia state, is currently on trial in Germany for publicly using a banned Nazi slogan.

Dirk Wiese, a senior politician for the SPD, told the Rheinische Post newspaper the AfD was "descending into chaos".

"First the allegations of sleazy money payments from the Kremlin, now suspected espionage for China... What's next, North Korea?" he said.

The AfD's parliamentary group chief Bernd Baumann slammed the China spying claims as "politically motivated" and put them down to "dirty" electioneering.

"We have become pretty hardened when it comes to accusations, especially in pre-election and election campaign times," he said, blaming "suspicious reporting" for many of the claims.

- End of an era? -

Asked about the alleged links to Russia, AfD co-leader Chrupalla said that "as long as no evidence and proof is put on the table, we cannot react".

Chrupalla also remained reticent on the China issue, stressing that no charges had been brought and the party leadership would "wait and see" how the case develops before coming to any conclusions.

But despite the attempts at damage limitation, experts say the scandals could have a profound effect on the AfD's chances in this year's elections.

"The party is not managing to go on the offensive at the moment," said Wolfgang Schroeder, a political analyst from the University of Kassel.

"The AfD is allowing itself to be cornered rather than setting the issues itself," he said.

The AfD is currently still polling neck-and-neck with the SPD at the national level and in first place in Brandenburg, Saxony and Thuringia, all holding regional polls in September.

But Hajo Funke, a political analyst who specialises in the far right, said support for the party has "fallen considerably in some cases" because of the scandals.

"Overall, I believe that the great era of 'we are doing better and better' has come to an end," he told AFP.

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DEMOCRACY
Chinese spying claims deepen German far right's woes
Berlin (AFP) April 24, 2024
Germany's far-right AfD battled Wednesday to draw a line under Chinese spying allegations, the latest in a slew of scandals to hit the anti-immigration party in a key election year. German authorities on Tuesday said they had arrested an aide to Maximilian Krah, a member of the European Parliament for the AfD and the party's top candidate for June's EU elections, on suspicion of spying for China. Krah, who was summoned by the party to Berlin, would not attend a key event this weekend officially ... read more

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