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German far-right party spokesman sacked for reportedly suggesting migrants 'could be gassed'

Christian Lueth of the Alternative for Germany party was already suspended after allegedly describing himself as a ‘fascist’.

Christian Lueth of the Alternative for Germany party attends a press conference in Berlin in October, 2018.
Christian Lueth of the Alternative for Germany party attends a press conference in Berlin in October, 2018. Source: AP

Germany's far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) political party has fired a longtime spokesman after reports he discussed shooting or gassing refugees and migrants coming to Europe's top economy in a taped conversation.

The parliamentary group of the anti-Islam, anti-migration Alternative for Germany, the Bundestag's largest opposition party, on Monday told AFP it sacked Christian Lueth "with immediate effect" after it emerged he made the incendiary remarks.

News website Zeit Online had reported earlier that Mr Lueth was speaking with a right-leaning YouTube reporter in February and was secretly filmed by a commercial broadcaster.

In the conversation, he welcomed the fact that "even more migrants" were coming to Germany after it took in more than one million asylum seekers during the 2015-16 refugee influx because it would benefit the AfD politically.

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"We can still shoot them all to death afterwards. That's not a problem," Mr Lueth is quoted as saying.

"Or gas them, or however you want. I don't care!"

Zeit Online said the broadcaster with the tape, ProSieben, only identified the speaker as a high-ranking AfD official without naming him.

But the website said several informants told it the speaker was Mr Lueth. The video is to be broadcast on German television later on Monday.

ProSieben said the man was trying to convince the journalist he was speaking to work with the party.

"The worse Germany is doing, the better for the AfD," he is quoted as saying.

Two months after the meeting, Mr Lueth was reportedly suspended after he described himself as a fascist and praised his "Aryan grandfather".

Mr Lueth's grandfather was a submarine commander during World War II and received an Iron Cross from Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, Zeit reported at the time.

As the migration issue has lost urgency in Germany, the AfD's support has slipped. It is currently polling at about 11 per cent ahead of next year's general election to name Chancellor Angela Merkel's successor.  


2 min read

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Updated

Source: AFP, SBS



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