BFF-66 Merkel removes spy chief to defuse row over far-right

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Merkel removes spy chief to defuse row over far-right

BERLIN, Sept 18, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Angela Merkel’s government on Tuesday
removed domestic spy chief Hans-Georg Maassen from office, transferring him
to a different post to defuse an explosive row over immigration and the far
right that once more rocked the German chancellor’s fragile coalition.

“Mr Maassen will become state secretary in the interior ministry,” Merkel
and the leaders of her coalition parties announced in a statement after
crisis talks.

The face-saving compromise lets Merkel’s fourth-term government live to see
another day, after her Social Democratic coalition partners had insisted on
Maassen’s departure as head of the BfV intelligence service, against the
wishes of Interior Minister Horst Seehofer from her Bavarian CSU sister
party.

Maassen, 55, was at the centre of a heated controversy after he raised
doubts about the veracity of reports of far-right hooligans and neo-Nazis
randomly attacking immigrants in the eastern city of Chemnitz in late August.

In his senior new role, essentially a promotion, Maassen will not be
responsible for supervising the Federal Office for the Protection of the
Constitution (BfV), the party leaders stressed in their statement.

– ‘Hatred in the streets’ –

The far-right attacks in Chemnitz, which caused revulsion in Germany, were
triggered by the fatal stabbing of a German man over which police are holding
a Syrian suspect and searching for an Iraqi man. A court freed another
initial Iraqi suspect on Tuesday.

Days after the unrest, Maassen questioned the authenticity of amateur video
footage showing street violence and voiced doubt that racists had indeed
“hunted down” foreigners — comments that directly contradicted Merkel, who
had deplored the xenophobic attacks and “hatred in the streets”.

SPD leaders — as well as the opposition Greens, Free Democrats and Linke
parties — had demanded the resignation or sacking of the spy chief for
political meddling, and pointed to his repeated meetings with leaders of the
anti-immigration Alternative for Germany (AfD) party.

Whatever Maassen’s true political leanings, the issue has turned him into a
martyr of Merkel haters and the far right.

The AfD’s Alice Weidel wrote on Facebook that “anyone who criticises
Merkel’s illegal immigration policy is mercilessly put through the wringer by
the mainstream parties”.

– Deep chasms –

Maassen has rejected accusations that he has supported AfD lawmakers with
early access to unpublished data and advice on how to avoid surveillance by
his office.

Social Democrat leader Andrea Nahles had charged that Maassen had “provided
material for right-wing conspiracy theorists”.

However, Maassen had the backing of his immediate boss, the CSU’s hardline
Interior Minister Seehofer, who has for three years been Merkel’s nemesis
within the ruling grand coalition.

Seehofer, a harsh critic of Merkel’s 2015 decision to allow a mass influx
of migrants and refugees, had in July brought the government to the brink of
collapse with his threat to shutter national borders to asylum seekers.

With that bitter dispute barely papered over, the conflict over Maassen’s
fate once more highlighted the deep chasms within Merkel’s coalition.

On one level, both major parties, the CDU and SPD, are distrustful partners
stuck in a political marriage of convenience after the AfD, a one-time fringe
party, poached millions of their voters in last year’s elections.

– ‘Mother of all problems’ –

But the rift is deepest between Merkel and Seehofer, whose own political
future hangs in the balance as his CSU braces for potentially massive losses
to the AfD in Bavarian state elections next month.

Seehofer recently labelled the migration issue “the mother of all problems”
in German politics — a comment read by many as a veiled reference to
Merkel’s nickname “Mutti”, or Mummy.

BSS/AFP/MRI/2322 hrs