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German man gets life in prison for deadly anti-Semitic rampage

Defendant shot two dead after failure to enter synagogue on Yom Kippur last year

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 21 Dec 2020 10:30PM

German man gets life in prison for deadly anti-Semitic rampage
The verdict makes it clear that there will be no tolerance for the homicidal hatred of Jews,’ says Josef Schuster, head of Germany’s Central Council of Jews. – World Jewish Congress pic, December

MAGDEBURG – A German court on Monday handed a life sentence to a neo-Nazi behind a deadly attack last year that nearly became the country’s worst anti-Semitic atrocity since World War II.

A bolted door at the synagogue in the eastern city of Halle with 52 worshippers inside marking Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish year, was the only thing that prevented the heavily armed attacker from carrying out a planned bloodbath.

After failing to storm the temple on October 9 last year, Stephan Balliet, 28, shot dead a female passer-by and a man at a kebab shop.

“Without that famous reinforced door, he would have committed a massacre,” presiding judge Ursula Mertens said as she read out the verdict.

Balliet, his head shaved and dressed in black, listened with a blank expression.

During his five-month trial, Balliet denied the Holocaust in open court – a crime in Germany – and expressed no remorse to those targeted, many of whom were co-plaintiffs in the case.

He was convicted of two counts of murder and multiple counts of attempted murder in a case that deeply rattled the country and fuelled fears about rising right-wing extremism and anti-Jewish violence, 75 years after the end of the Nazi era.

The head of Germany’s Central Council of Jews, Josef Schuster, welcomed the sentence.

“This is an important day for Germany,” he said in a statement. “The verdict makes it clear that there will be no tolerance for the homicidal hatred of Jews.”

A lawyer for nine of the co-plaintiffs, Mark Lupschitz, told AFP he was “relieved” by the verdict and called the proceedings both “stressful and empowering” for the intended victims.

A government spokesman, Ulrike Demmer, told reporters that the Halle attack “showed us how important it is to even more decisively continue the fight against anti-Semitism, xenophobia and hostility to democracy”.

During the trial, Balliet insisted that “attacking the synagogue was not a mistake, they are my enemies”.

Dressed in military garb, he filmed the attack and broadcast it on the internet, prefacing it with a manifesto espousing his misogynist, neo-fascist ideology.

The attack bore some of the hallmarks of two carried out and similarly live-streamed some months earlier in Christchurch, New Zealand, by Brenton Tarrant, who killed 51 people. Balliet cited Tarrant as an inspiration.

Israel’s ambassador to Germany, Jeremy Issacharoff, said the assault remained “a very, very alarming moment in German history”.

“If that guy would have been able to get into a synagogue... it would have had a tremendous impact on German identity after the war and the fight against anti-Semitism,” he told AFP in an interview.

Hatred of Jews is “a phenomenon that attacks the very democratic essence of Germany and I think that is the thing that is so important to protect”, he said.

A few dozen demonstrators against right-wing extremism gathered outside the courthouse before the verdict was pronounced, unfurling a large black banner that read “We remember the victims of the attack of October 9, 2019”.

Prosecutor Kai Lohse said during the trial that Balliet had acted on the basis of a “racist, xenophobic and anti-Semitic ideology” to carry out an attack against not only those he killed, but “Jewish life in Germany as a whole”.

Baillet “described the fatal shots fired at his two victims in Halle without emotion” and appeared disappointed that he had failed in his attempt to enter the synagogue, psychiatrist Norbert Leygraf said in an evaluation of the defendant.

He said Balliet suffered from symptoms of schizophrenia, paranoia and autism, preventing him from having “empathy with others” while feeling “superior to others”.

Crimes targeting Jews and their belief have risen steadily in Germany in recent years, with 2,032 offences recorded in 2019, up 13% from the previous year.

Meanwhile, a string of far-right terrorist attacks have shocked Germany, including the assassination of pro-refugee politician Walter Luebcke at his home in June last year and the February murder of nine migrant-origin people in the western city of Hanau. – AFP, December 21, 2020

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