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Germany charges alleged teen members of right-wing extremist group with attempted murder

German police officers stand together during a demonstration in Giessen, 29 November, 2025
German police officers stand together during a demonstration in Giessen, 29 November, 2025 Copyright  AP Photo
Copyright AP Photo
By Gavin Blackburn
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Most of the youths were arrested in May, when they were accused of involvement with a group calling itself "Last Defence Wave."

Germany's federal prosecutor brought charges against eight suspects on Thursday for their alleged membership in a "right-wing extremist terrorist" group that allegedly aimed to destabilise the country's democratic system by carrying out attacks on migrants and political opponents.

Prosecutors also charged the seven alleged members and one supporter of the group, some of them teenagers, with attempted murder, conspiracy to commit murder, and grievous bodily harm.

Most of the youths were arrested in May, when they were accused of involvement with a group calling itself Last Defence Wave.

According to the federal prosecutor's office, the group sees itself as the "final authority" for defending the "German nation."

It said the group was founded in May 2024 and that it planned or carried out arson and bomb attacks on asylum-seekers’ homes and left-wing institutions.

Police officers stand on a street in Herdecke, 7 October, 2025
Police officers stand on a street in Herdecke, 7 October, 2025 AP Photo

At the time, five suspects aged 14 to 21 were arrested in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Brandenburg and Hesse.

Police searched 13 properties there, as well as in Saxony and Thuringia. Three other suspects were already in custody at the time.

Due to the suspects' age, some of them had to appear with their parents before the investigating judge at the Federal Court of Justice in Karlsruhe.

Except for one suspect released in July, all others are in pretrial detention.

Federal prosecutors attribute three attacks and planned attacks to the group, including an arson attack on a cultural centre in Altdöbern in the state of Brandenburg, an attempted but unsuccessful attack on an asylum-seeker's home in Schmölln in Thuringia, and plans to attack asylum-seeker accommodation in Senftenberg, also in Brandenburg.

Nobody was injured during the incidents. Several members of the group were also accused of robbing and beating individuals, causing significant injuries, the prosecutor's statement said.

Migrants and refugees at a registration centre in Berlin, 4 January, 2016
Migrants and refugees at a registration centre in Berlin, 4 January, 2016 AP Photo

According to documents released in July, the group's members planned to "trigger a race war in which a spiral of violence and counterviolence would be set in motion to preserve the 'white race' and ultimately eliminate liberal democracy," German news agency dpa reported.

They are said to have posted racist and antisemitic messages on social media and glorified Nazi Germany and Nazi ideology.

Additional sources • AP

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