CHEMNITZ, Aug 30 — German police braced for more far-right protests today against Chancellor Angela Merkel’s immigration policies in the eastern city where a fatal stabbing has sparked outbreaks of racist mob violence.

Saxony state police said they would be backed by reinforcements from five other states and federal police, after being heavily outnumbered by thousands of neo-Nazis, football hooligans and other extremists in unrest on Sunday and Monday.

The flashpoint city of Chemnitz, where state premier Michael Kretschmer was to hold a town hall-style meeting on democracy from 1700 GMT, has seen a violent outbreak of long-simmering anger against what protesters label “criminal immigrants” since Sunday’s knife killing.

Police have arrested Iraqi Yousif Ibrahim A., 22, and the Syrian Alaa S., 23, for the stabbing of 35-year-old Daniel H., a carpenter — the crime that set off random street attacks against people whom the mob took to be foreigners.

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The disturbing scenes, which saw assaults against an Afghan, a Syrian and a Bulgarian man and were described as “pogrom-like” by some observers, have sparked widespread revulsion in Germany and beyond.

In another violent hate crime overnight in the ex-communist east, a 20-year-old migrant was subjected to xenophobic insults, kicked and beaten with a iron chain by three men in the Baltic coast city of Wismar, police said without giving his nationality.

Images of protesters making the illegal Hitler salute in Monday’s protest were “shocking,” said UN human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, demanding that politicians from all over Europe speak out.

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Merkel — travelling in Africa until Friday, mainly to discuss how to fight the causes of migration to Europe — has condemned the far-right protests, declaring there is no place for “hate in the streets” in a liberal democratic state.

Inflamed passions

Tensions risked being inflamed further by a news report that the Iraqi suspect in the murder case had, despite a lengthy criminal record, somehow avoided deportation.

The trained hairdresser had arrived in Germany in 2015, the peak year of the influx that would bring over one million mostly Muslim people to the EU’s biggest economy, reported mass-circulation Bild daily.

Since then he had reportedly received a suspended seven-month jail term for assault and been charged with other offences, including taking illegal drugs across national borders, fraud and property damage.

Crimes by immigrants are routinely seized upon by the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) and the street movement Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident (PEGIDA) who label Merkel a “traitor” for allowing them into the country.

AfD leader Alexander Gauland, a defector from Merkel’s centre-right party, told Die Welt daily that “it is normal that people are fed up with the situation... Migration is destroying the feeling that you can trust your neighbour.”

The AfD and other anti-immigration groups have called for another major protest in Chemnitz on Saturday, with a “silent march” planned for the stabbing victim.

‘Hostile Takeover’

The violence and heated debate on immigration have brought back to the fore what has become the most challenging political issue for Merkel, especially in the formerly communist east where the AfD is the number one party in some towns and regions.

Lawmaker Wolfgang Kubicki of the liberal Free Democrats also attacked Merkel by charging that the root of the angry turmoil of Chemnitz lay in her optimistic mantra — “we can do it” — on the challenge of integrating the many newcomers.

After an initially jubilant welcome, the migrant influx sparked a strong backlash that saw a spate of hate crimes, swept the populist fringe party AfD into parliament and led to a coarsening of political discourse on social media and in real life.

One star of the “new right”, central banker turned best-selling author Thilo Sarrazin, today published a new book provocatively entitled Hostile Takeover — How Islam Hampers Progress and Threatens Society.

Speaking to news weekly Stern, Sarrazin demanded that immigration be curbed and warned that Muslims could in two or three generations form the majority of the German population, allowing them to “change laws and shape Germany and Europe the way they want”.

Pre-orders made the book the immediate number one best-seller in Germany on online retailer Amazon. — AFP