The leader of Germany’s
“anti-Islamisation” movement PEGIDA has stepped down after a picture emerged of
him sporting a Hitler-style haircut and moustache, along with racist slurs he
posted on Facebook.
“Yes, I am stepping down from the
board,” Lutz Bachmann, 41, was quoted as telling Bild daily in an online report
on Wednesday.
Addressing his followers on Facebook,
he said: “I sincerely apologise to all citizens who felt attacked by my posts.”
“They were thoughtless statements that
I would not make today. I am sorry that I have damaged the interests of our
movement with them and I am acting accordingly.”
A photo of Bachmann looking like Nazi
leader Adolf Hitler had surfaced Wednesday, going viral on social media
and sparking a storm of protest.
Media reports also said that Bachmann
had posted comments on Facebook in the past referring to refugees as “beasts”
and “filth”.
Dresden’s public prosecutor was
investigating whether to open a case against him on charges of incitement of
hatred.
PEGIDA spokeswoman Kathrin Oertel
welcomed Bachmann’s resignation, saying that his “Hitler selfie” had been
“satire, which is every citizen’s right” but that “sweeping insults against
strangers” went too far.
She said Bachmann, who founded PEGIDA
— “Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident” — in the
eastern city of Dresden in October, had posted the picture in September, before
he became prominent.
Bachmann took the photo, which shows
him with a small black moustache and hair swept into a side-parting, around the
time of the publication of a bestselling satirical audiobook about Hitler
entitled “Look Who’s Back”.
The furore it caused torpedoed
PEGIDA’s recent efforts at a charm offensive with the media to present a more
moderate image.
At their first-ever press conference
this week, Bachmann and Oertel had distanced themselves from the neo-Nazis who
had joined their rallies and said that most of their supporters were citizens
fed up with contemporary politics.
About 5,000 right-wing protesters,
meanwhile, again started to mass, this time in another eastern city, Leipzig,
separated by riot police from thousands of anti-racist counter-demonstrators.
The showing of PEGIDA’s Leipzig
spin-off “LEGIDA” was, in the early evening, far below the up to 40,000 organisers
had expected — in part because of a large number of people at almost 20 counter
demonstrations.
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