Two days before the start of the newly elected parliament in Germany, more than 10,000 protesters protested against hardliners in Berlin on Sunday. Demonstrators protested against the 'hatred and racism' in the Parliament of Germany, surrounded by Parliament Bundshtag. Later they were assembled in front of the historic Berlin Gate.
The hardline Alternative for the Dutch (AFD) is going to join 92 seats in the parliament on 24 October with the third highest vote in the German national election. The hardliner group, which won 12 percent of the vote in four weeks before the refugee, immigrant, popularly popular anti-Islamic slogan. This is the first such racist group since World War II to enter the German parliament.
Demonstrators said their protest against the efforts of spreading hatred against the religion, caste and caste in the German parliament.
Several social organizations, including Compact, Abhas, organized this protest called 'struggle against racism'.
The president of the Green Committee's Parliament Committee, Anthon Hofrighter, said the protests suggest that there is no chance of racist discussions in the German parliament and that the hardliners should understand the time when it is time.
However, the president of the parliamentary committee for the Alternative for Dietrich, Peter Falsler said that they are being democratically elected and going to parliament. The protests have been organized to spread hatred for members of their party Parliament.
Former German Foreign Minister Yaskar Fisher compared the Hitler's Nazi team to the Alternatives for Diethenland in a recent interview.