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Politically motivated crime hits all-time high in Germany

By AFP
June 10, 2026
Police detain a protester during a demonstration by far-right supporters in Berlin on March 22, 2025.—AFP
Police detain a protester during a demonstration by far-right supporters in Berlin on March 22, 2025.—AFP

BERLIN: Far-right and other politically motivated crime in Germany has doubled over the past decade to hit an all-time high last year, the government said on Tuesday.

Such crimes -- ranging from hate speech and property offences to assault -- rose by two percent to 85,837 reported cases last year, with about half motivated by right-wing ideology.

“By far the most offences were committed by right-wing and far-right perpetrators,” said Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt, but he stressed that left-wing offences rose most sharply.

Security services pointed to a hardening tone in online discourse fuelling hatred and violence in the streets.

“Key drivers of societal polarisation are social media, through which hatred, incitement and propaganda are spread,” said Federal Criminal Police Office chief Holger Muench.

“This accelerates radicalisation and, in the worst case, leads to serious crimes in the offline world.”

Violent crime rose by 1.2 per cent to 4,156 cases, the highest number in a decade, police said.

“Violent offences are rising significantly in both the left-wing and right-wing extremist spheres,” Dobrindt told a Berlin press conference.

So-called hate crimes, committed due to group-related prejudices, were up 1.8 percent to 22,159 reported offences.