Frauke Petry, the former co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany political party, is to stand trial charged with giving false evidence about campaign financing. If found guilty, she could face a year in jail.
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The Dresden district court on Tuesday said it would hear evidence against former AfD co-leader Petry over an allegation of perjury.
The 43-year-old is accused of lying under oath in November 2015, when she and her fellow AfD member Carsten Hütter are alleged to have given conflicting testimony about the AfD candidate list and campaign financing for Saxony's 2014 state election.
The election was the first that saw the AfD take seats in one of Germany's state parliaments; it's now represented in every state chamber bar one.
Petry — who won a seat with the AfD in that election — has already admitted to a mistake in the evidence that she gave at the electoral oversight committee hearing in November 2015, but she said it was not intentional.
Perjury can carry a sentence of at least a year in jail in Germany, or six months in minor cases. A date for the hearing has still not been set.
Hans-Georg Maassen: A controversial career
Germany's ex-spy chief Hans-Georg Maassen is no stranger to controversy. He has been accused of a number of improprieties throughout his career and is suspected by many of having sympathies with far-right ideology.
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Shadowy figure
Hans-Georg Maassen, the former head of Germany's Office for the Protection of the Constitution (BfV) — the domestic intelligence service — has often drawn fire for his remarks and actions.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Hirschberger
Trouble in the Interior Ministry
Maassen gained notoriety in 2002 while working for the German Interior Ministry and arguing that Murat Kurnaz, a German resident held in the US prison at Guantanamo for five years before being released, could not return to Germany because his residency had lapsed. Herta Däubler-Gmelin, who was justice minister at the time, called Maassen's argument, "false, appalling and inhumane."
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Schmidt
Vows to restore trust
In 2012, Maassen was tapped to lead Germany's top spy agency. He promised to restore faith in the BfV, which was embroiled in controversy over its entanglement in the right-wing extremist scene and his predecessor's decision to destroy files related to the neo-Nazi NSU murders.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Pilick
First calls for firing
Maassen has been accused of having "a troubled relationship with basic democratic principles" for his pursuit of bloggers on grounds of treason and trying to suppress negative stories on the BfV. In January 2017, he told parliament reports the BfV had undercover agents in the Islamist scene connected to the Berlin Christmas market attack were false. Records showing it did became public in 2018.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/R. Hirschberger
Sympathies for the right?
Before Maassen made headlines by questioning the veracity of videos of right-wing protesters chasing foreigners through the streets of Chemnitz, he was under fire for advising right-wing populist party Alternative for Germany (AfD) on how to avoid scrutiny from his agency. He has also been accused of sharing confidential documents with the AfD before presenting them to the public.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/K. Nietfeld
One faithful friend ...
Interior Minister Horst Seehofer (r.) continued to support Maassen even after his controversial remarks over Chemnitz. Seehofer even took the ex-spy chief into the Interior Ministry in what was essentially a promotion. But that compromise has not been seen favorably by many in Germany, and failed to calm troubled waters within the ruling coalition over the affair.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/B.v. Jutrczenka
Forced out of office
Maassen was finally forced into retirement in 2018 after he spoke about "radical left-wing elements" in the Social Democratic Party (SPD), the junior partner in the ruling coalition, who had, he said, seized gladly upon his controversial remarks to provoke divisions in the government. He also criticized Germany's policies on refugees and security as "naive and leftist."
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Campaigning for the Bundestag
The Christian Democrat Union in one district in the eastern German state of Thuringia chose the controversial former intelligence chief to run in this year's parliamentary election. Some 86% of party members in the small region voted in favor of Maassen becoming the party's directly-elected candidate on the ballot. The move means he has a shot at entering Germany's parliament in September.
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The accusations are in connection with loans that AfD candidates in Saxony gave to the far-right party to finance campaigning in the eastern state. The AfD was accused of taking a candidate off its list because he was not willing to give a loan to the party.
Petry joined the AfD in 2013 and quickly rose through the ranks to be one of the party's public faces. She assumed the role of party co-leader in 2015, but stepped down in 2017, soon after being elected to the German national parliament on the AfD ticket. Petry said she would not be representing the AfD in the federal parliament, but she is still entitled to a Bundestag seat having won a direct mandate in the 2017 vote.
In October last year, Petry announced that she would form a new party called the Blue Party, intended to be positioned to the left of the AfD.