Germany bans far-right, pro-Nazi group; Police raid homes

Associated Press|
More than 180 police officers raided homes in three German states early Tuesday after the German government banned a far-right group, the interior ministry said.
The homes of 11 members of the far-right group Wolfsbrigade 44 were searched in Hesse, Mecklenburg West-Pomerania and North Rhine-Westphalia to confiscate the group's funds and far-right propaganda material, the German news agency DPA reported.
"Whoever fights against the basic values of our free society will get to feel the resolute reaction of our government," Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said. "There's no place in this country for an association that sows hatred and and works on the resurrection of a Nazi state."
The members of the group want to re-establish a Nazi dictatorship and abolish democracy, the interior ministry said. The 44 in their name stands for the fourth letter in the alphabet, DD, and is an abbreviation for Division Dirlewanger. Oskar Dirlewanger was a known Nazi war criminal and commander of a Nazi SS special unit.
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