The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) is to hold an event on Friday in the southern city of Aschaffenburg, where a fatal knife attack has inflamed tensions over migration policy just weeks ahead of national elections.
“See you in Aschaffenburg,” wrote the party’s extremist leader in the state of Thuringia, Björn Höcke.
Höcke is seen as the leader of the radical wing within the anti-immigration AfD, and is well known across Germany for his fiery rhetoric, having twice been convicted for knowingly quoting a banned Nazi slogan.
The suspect in the attack earlier this week is a 28-year-old Afghan asylum seeker with a history of mental health illnesses. He was temporarily committed to a psychiatric hospital on Thursday.
He is accused of two murders, two attempted murders and one case of dangerous bodily harm.
According to the police and public prosecutors, he has not yet commented on the accusations.
Rallies and memorial services
The AfD, which is currently second in the polls, is to hold a meeting from 4 pm (1500 GMT) in the city’s Schöntal park, where the attack took place.
The city’s main memorial service is set to take place on Sunday, with Interior Minister Nancy Faeser and Bavarian Premier Markus Söder among those planning to attend.
It was initially unclear whether relatives of the victims would also be attending.
An alliance of local organizations is planning an event at the city’s Theaterplatz on Saturday to oppose the politicization of the tragedy, with Mayor Jürgen Herzing due to give a speech
An initial commemoration in the park on Thursday drew some 3,000 people, police said.
Teacher released from hospital
Also on Friday, a police spokesman said that a kindergarten teacher who was injured in the attack has been released from hospital. The teacher had a broken arm.
A 2-year-old Syrian girl who was seriously injured in the incident and a 72-year-old man are still in hospital.
“The child will not be released until Monday,” the police spokesman said.
Police: ‘Threshold has been crossed’
Police are continuing to investigate why the suspect was at large when he committed the attack, having been due to face deportation.
It was revealed on Friday that the suspect had also been facing jail over his failure to pay a fine.
The German Police Union (GdP) says a “threshold has been crossed” with the latest attack, which comes after similar incidents in the last year in Magdeburg, Solingen and Mannheim.
“We need quick solutions now,” GdP chairman Jochen Kopelke told the Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland media group on Friday.
The GdP chapter in the southern state of Bavaria said that “with the murder of a small child, a threshold has been crossed that now finally requires decisive action.”