German police investigates AfD for sending out 'deportation tickets'
The far-right party sent mock deportation tickets to residents in Karlsruhe ahead of elections, sparking condemnation from residents and officials.
Police have launched an investigation into the local branch of the Germany's far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party for sending mock one-way deportation tickets in the run-up to the country's election.
The inflammatory campaign materials, designed to resemble one-way economy plane tickets “from Germany” to “a safe country of origin,” specified February 23 -- the date of upcoming parliamentary elections -- as the departure date.
On the flyers, "AfD" is entered as the departure gate, and two sentences read, "Only remigration can save Germany" and, "It's nice at home too".
Karlsruhe's Social Democratic Mayor Frank Mentrup denounced the action as “crossing a dangerous line.”
Mentrup strongly criticised the flyers, stating that they were creating fear in immigrant communities and damaging social cohesion.
The incident comes amid rising concerns about the AfD's growing influence in German politics.
A recent INSA institute poll found 22% of Germans plan to vote for the AfD, making it the second-strongest party behind the conservative CDU/CSU bloc at 31%. Chancellor Olaf Scholz's Social Democratic Party (SPD) trails at 15%.
Die AfD hat gefälschte Abschiebetickets in die Briefkasten von Bürgern mit Migrationshintergrund geworfen. Ist allen...
Posted by Tarek Baé on Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Despite recent controversies, including revelations of a secret meeting where senior AfD officials discussed the mass deportation of immigrants, the party has maintained strong support, particularly in eastern Germany.
German intelligence authorities have monitored various AfD branches and its youth wing since 2021 due to concerns about anti-democratic tendencies. The party continues to face persistent criticism for its members' anti-immigrant and anti-Islam statements.