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Neo-Nazis Disrupt Tours of Buchenwald

Unwanted visits from neo-Nazis are becoming an increasing problem for the memorial center at the World War II concentration camp at Buchenwald in eastern Germany, museum director Volkhard Knigge said Thursday.

BERLIN (AFP) — Unwanted visits from neo-Nazis are becoming an increasing problem for the memorial center at the World War II concentration camp at Buchenwald in eastern Germany, museum director Volkhard Knigge said Thursday.

Right-wing extremists were taking part in "targeted and pre-planned disruptions of tours" of the former camp, Knigge told the Neue Westfaelische newspaper.

His comments came as more than 40 world leaders — including German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier — gathered in Jerusalem for a remembrance event at the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial Center.

Yet amid worldwide commemorations of the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the camps this month, Knigge said that neo-Nazis were becoming more present at Buchenwald.

"We increasingly find messages in the guest book claiming that Nazism and the concentration camps were sensible and good for the Germans," he said.

Knigge said that neo-Nazis smuggled themselves into tour groups to question facts and figures or deny the Holocaust outright.

The disruptions were often filmed as a way for extremists to profile themselves in the neo-Nazi scene, he added.

Knigge also expressed fear that "something is breaking away in terms of historical awareness, human sensitivity and democratic and political orientation."

He said that staff at the memorial center had now been trained to deal with the disruptions, and that rules for visitors had been tightened.

Buchenwald has been targeted before by neo-Nazis.

In 2010, the memorial center’s website was hacked by right-wing extremists.

The former camp also was visited by the NSU murderers, three neo-Nazis who killed nine Greek and Turkish immigrants and a German policewoman between 2000 and 2007.

In 1996, the trio showed up at Buchenwald wearing mock Nazi uniforms and were banned from the place for life.

© Agence France-Presse

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