Germany AfD meeting: Clashes before right-wing conference

Germany AfD meeting: Clashes before right-wing conference
German riot police is pictured during the AfD party congress in Stuttgart, Germany, April 30, 2016Image copyrightReuters
Image captionClose to 1,000 police officers were deployed
Hundreds of left-wing demonstrators have tried to block people entering a right-wing party conference in the German city of Stuttgart.
The Alternative fur Deutschland (AfD) party is expected to re-brand itself as openly anti-Islamic during the meeting.
Police, who surrounded several hundred protesters, fired pepper spray at crowds. Close to 1,000 officers were deployed.
The AfD wants to ban the burqa and outlaw minarets in Germany.
Despite the protest, that saw some people carrying sticks and iron bars and burning tyres, the conference began as planned on Saturday morning.
One demonstrator, Dominik Schmeiser, said: "We are united by our conviction that we cannot let the AfD go unchallenged, and that it is a party which is not only racist, but which is engaged in the politics of exclusion and social division.
"We will not allow ourselves to be divided and we stand together for a compassionate society."
German police surround protesters who tried to block off access to the exhibition center where the Alternaitve for Germany (AfD) is to hold its party convention, in Stuttgart, Germany, 30 April 2016Image copyrightEPA
Image captionPolice surrounded demonstrators outside the meeting
Image copyrightReuters
Image captionOne protester holds a sign saying 'Against AfD racism and misogyny'
Frauke Petry, chairwoman of the anti-immigration party Alternative for Germany (AfD), reacts after losing her shoe during the AfD party congress in Stuttgart, Germany, April 30, 2016Image copyrightReuters
Image captionThe conference got under way on Saturday morning, after leader Frauke Petry lost her shoe
Nearly 2,000 members of the AfD are registered to attend the conference. The party achieved gains in all three states taking part in regional elections last month, claiming almost a quarter of the vote in the relatively poor eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt.
It had campaigned against what it called Chancellor Angela Merkel's "catastrophic" decision to accept a million migrants and refugees in 2015.
In Saturday's conference, the party must agree a manifesto ahead of next year's general election.
Proposals include withdrawal from the euro and the reintroduction of conscription, but there are splits within the party, including between its less hardline wing and the leadership.
Speaking to the conference, deputy Alexander Gauland said the AfD was a party that "has arrived in society and which is here to stay, whether the consensus parties like it or not".
Before the meeting, police encircled groups of demonstrators in a technique known as kettling. Some protesters were seen being dragged away, with others chanting 'Shame on you' at officers.
Police did not say how many people were arrested.

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