Social Democrat Nancy Faeser is one of the lesser-known members of Chancellor Olaf Scholz's new team. She wants to make the fight against racism and right-wing extremism her priority.
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Nancy Faesar is no stranger to dealing with enemies of an open, democratic and diverse society. The new German interior minister hails from the central German state of Hesse, which has repeatedly made the headlines because of right-wing extremist attacks. The most notorious took place in Hanau in February 2020, when a racist attacker shot nine people in a hookah bar.
And back in 2006, Halit Yozgat was shot in an internet cafe in Kassel, the ninth of ten victims of the National Socialist Underground (NSU), a neo-Nazi terrorist group.
Germany remembers Hanau attack
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In charge of intelligence service and police
Nancy Faeser has placed herself in the tradition of anti-fascists and women's rights activists. The mother of a six-year-old son is a trained lawyer and spent time studying in the United States before joining an international law firm in Frankfurt. In the negotiations to form the new coalition for Germany's new governemnt, she was a negotiator for her center-left Social Democrats (SPD) on the issues of migration and integration — key topics for the Interior Ministry.
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As a member of the Hesse state parliament from 2003, Nancy Faeser has had to deal with far-right extremist crimes time and again. And now she will face similar challenges at a national level in her new job in Berlin.
As Minister of the Interior, Faeser is responsible for security in Germany. She is in charge of such important agencies as Germany's domestic intelligence service (BfV), the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA), and the federal police. She is the first woman to hold this role.
In March 2021, Faeser addressed the Hesse state parliament and explained: "The fight against right-wing extremism is what has led me personally into politics."
She referred back to past Social Democrats who fought against Adolf Hitler and Nazism like Otto Wels or Kurt Schumacher, and the West German Chancellor and Nobel Peace Prize winner Willy Brandt.
She knows from her own experience what can happen if you stand up against right-wing extremism and for equal rights: She received personal threats from the "NSU 2.0" in an allusion to the original NSU terror group that killed ten people.
Other female politicians in Hesse received threats, too. And there were links to the Hesse police: Seda Basay-Yildizs, a lawyer for an NSU victim received death threats. It then emerged that her confidential data had been accessed from a police computer in Hesse. It is still unclear whether the data breach was intentional or a result of negligence.
As a member of the NSU investigation committee of the Hessian state parliament, Faeser looked into the circumstances surrounding Halit Yozgat who was shot and killed by the right-wing terrorists while an informant of the state domestic intelligence service sat next door and saw nothing. It has proved impossible to clear up that case, as the state's local government of center-right CDU and the Greens wants to keep the files under lock and key.
The leader of the Left Party, Janine Wissler, also knows the new German Interior Minister from that time. "I worked well with Nancy Faeser in Hesse, especially during the NSU investigation committee," Janine Wissler told DW. She described Faesar as a committed comrade-in-arms in the fight against right-wing violence and threats such as the "NSU 2.0."
As the leader of the opposition in Hesse, Faeser repeatedly accused the CDU-Green state government of serious failures in the fight against right-wing extremism. Now Kaeser will take up the fight against extremism at the federal level, where the focus of German and international public attention is high.
Chronicle of the NSU murders
The crimes of the neo-Nazi terror cell and the way state authorities dealt with them, still reverberate today. DW gives you the background to an affair that has shaken Germany.
Image: picture alliance / dpa
A mysterious string of murders
For years, neo-Nazis of the right-wing organization National Socialist Underground (NSU) killed people across Germany. The suspects: Uwe Mundlos, Uwe Böhnhardt (center) and Beate Zschäpe. Their victims: eight people of Turkish origin, one Greek man and a German policewoman. Their motive: xenophobia. Until 2011, the German public was not aware of the scope of their crimes.
Image: privat/dapd
Unsuccessful bank robbery
The murder spree was uncovered on November 4, 2011, when Mundlos and Böhnhardt robbed a bank in the east German town of Eisenach. For the first time, they failed. Police officers surrounded the caravan in which the two men were holed up. A later investigation concluded that Mundlos first shot and killed Böhnhardt, then set the caravan on fire and killed himself.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Zschäpe turns herself in
Shortly after the death of Böhnhardt and Mundlos there was an explosion at Frühlingsstraße 26 in Zwickau, in the state of Saxony. Beate Zschäpe lived at that address together with the two bank robbers. Zschäpe allegedly set the house on fire to destroy evidence. Four days later, she turned herself in to the police. The terror suspect has been custody since that day.
Image: Getty Images
The truth comes out
In the ruins of the Zwickau flat, police officers found a self-made video in which the terror cell claimed responsibility under the name of the NSU, the National-Socialist Underground. The 15-minute video shows crime scenes and pictures of the victims killed by the right-wing terrorist group between 2000 and 2007.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
NSU claim responsibility
Famous cartoon character The Pink Panther hosts the amateur video, which is full of slogans of hatred against people with an immigrant background and which mocks the murder victims. Before her arrest, Zschäpe allegedly sent out copies of the video in which the NSU claimed responsibility for the crimes.
Image: dapd
Verbal slip-ups
Until 2011, the term "döner murders" was frequently used when reporting about the killings. Nothing was known about the connection between the individual cases, nor about the motive. There were rumors the victims were linked to the drug scene. But the NSU's video left no doubt. The term "döner murders" was chosen as Germany's "Unwort des Jahres" (doublespeak of the year) in 2011.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
NSU also behind Cologne pipe bomb
"The findings made by our security authorities so far show no indication of a terrorist background, but of a criminal milieu," said German Interior Minister Otto Schily on June 10, 2004. A day earlier, a pipe bomb explosion in Cologne left 22 people injured and many shops damaged. In 2011, it became clear: the NSU’s right-wing terrorists were also behind the Cologne bombing.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Memorial service in Berlin
On February 23, 2012, Germany commemorated the victims. At the ceremony at a Berlin concert hall, the focus was on the relatives of the victims. Semiya Simsek (right), the daughter of the murdered flower stand owner Enver Simsek, gave an emotional speech. German Chancellor Angela Merkel made an official apology to the victims and promised them that all questions would be answered.
Image: Bundesregierung/Kugler
Memorial for Mehmet Kubasik
"Dortmund is a colorful, tolerant and welcoming town – and opposes right-wing extremism!" This statement was made by mayor Ullrich Sierau at the unveiling of the memorial stone for NSU victim Mehmet Kubasik in September 2012. The memorial was set up just meters away from the kiosk in which Kubasik was killed on April 4, 2006.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Solidarity with the victims
On November 4, 2012, exactly a year after the terror cell was uncovered, people in many German cities staged solidarity demonstrations against right-wing extremism. The protesters called for thorough investigations into the racially motivated murders - which in their view was not happening fast enough.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa
Beate Zschäpe lone survivor
Believed to be the last survivor of the NSU trio, Beate Zschäpe went on trial in May 2013.Over 800 witnesses were heard. Zschäpe did not speak for the first two and a half years of the trial.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Schrader
Life sentence
Beate Zschäpe was given a life sentence. She was found guilty of joint complicity in 10 counts of murder, arson, robbery, extortion, the formation of a terrorist organization and membership in a terrorist organization. Though there was no evidence that she herself was present at the scene of the crimes, the judges felt that the "particular severity of guilt" required for a life sentence applied.
Image: Getty Images/A. Gebert
The co-accused
Ralf Wohlleben received 10 years for procuring weapons for the NSU, co-accused Holger G. got three years for providing false identity papers. Another co-accused, Andre E, received two and a half years for providing the NSU with rail passes in his and his wife's name. He also allegedly rented a mobile home which the cell drove to Cologne to carry out a bombing.
Image: AFP/Getty Images/C. Stache
Long lasting impact
When conservative politician Walter Lübcke was murdered by a neo-Nazi activist in 2019, his name was also found on the 'list of enemies' for targetted killings. Lübcke had come under attack from the far-right following a speech he made in 2015 defending the decision to take in refugees from the Syrian war.
Image: Swen Pförtner/dpa/picture alliance
Securty agency failings
The federal and the state parliaments launched investigations to shed light on the security authorities' failures in the NSU case: The role of paid informants, the lack of cooperation between the various intelligence agencies and state interior ministries, which are responsible for police in the respective states, and allegations of systemic racism on the part of German authorities.
Data protection issues may prove controversial in the new coalition government in Berlin. Both the Green Party and the neoliberal Free Democrats (FDP) oppose the highly controversial data retention law, which pits them against Kaeser's.
The two smaller parties are also skeptical of the German Federal Intelligence Service's (BND) mandate to monitor telecommunications — which the Federal Constitutional Court has ruled to be unconstitutional.
In short, when it comes to security policy, the new federal government is by no means united. For Nancy Faeser, this will be a new experience. After all, as German interior minister, she will be dealing with larger issues of national and international security architecture than she has been doing as opposition leader in a German state.
This text has been translated from German.
Meet Germany's government
Germany's first-ever three-way coalition government came into office in December 2021. These are the 17 individuals who are shaping federal politics.
Image: Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa/picture alliance
Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD)
Scholz was the finance minister and vice-chancellor in the previous government and is the ninth chancellor and the fourth Social Democrat to hold the office. The former mayor of Hamburg handed his center-left party the surprise win in 2021, having campaigned on stability and pragmatism. Perceived as cautious and unemotional, he has sought to show leadership following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Image: Emmanuele Contini/Getty Images
Finance Minister Christian Lindner (FDP)
Media-savvy Christian Lindner has been the leader of the business-oriented, neoliberal Free Democratic Party (FDP) since 2013, inheriting a party that had just lost representation in parliament in the election. As Finance Minister during a time of multiple crises, he has been struggling to limit government spending while protecting the wealthy from tax hikes.
Economy and Climate Protection Minister Robert Habeck (Greens)
The vice chancellor is a member of the more moderate wing of his environmentalist party. He quickly outshone the chancellor with his open communication style, but then lost support in his attempt to implement a pragmatic wartime energy policy. The philosophy major and former author of children's books was previously Environment and Agriculture Minister in his home state of Schleswig-Holstein.
Image: Christian Spicker/IMAGO Images
Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock
Germany's top diplomat emphasizes a "values-guided" and "feminist" foreign policy. Some months after Russia's war on Ukraine began, she has become the most popular member of the government. She has ruffled feathers by urging a tougher tone on China. Baerbock is only the second Green politician to take on the post, after Joschka Fischer in the late 1990s.
Possibly the biggest surprise in Scholz's new Cabinet, Faeser was elevated from SPD party leader in Hesse to one of Germany's biggest ministries, her first role at federal level. She has taken a tough line, especially on far-right extremism. She is the first woman to hold the office.
Image: Hannibal Hanschke/REUTERS
Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD)
The virologist was a popular choice for Germans who enjoyed his outspoken appearances on TV talk shows, advocating a tough health policy throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. It has not all been smooth sailing for him since then. Lauterbach has vowed to tackle reforming Germany's overstretched hospital system.
Image: picture alliance/dpa
Justice Minister Marco Buschmann (FDP)
Christian Lindner is said to be the face of the FDP, but his childhood friend Marco Buschmann is said to be the brain. From humble beginnings, he excelled in his legal academic career. First elected to the Bundestag in 2009, his signature issue has been protecting individual freedoms. He is not one of the conservative hawks in his party but is cautious about immigration.
Food and Agriculture Minister Cem Özdemir (Greens)
The veteran Green Party politician joined the federal government after over a quarter-century in the German parliament. The first-ever German Cabinet minister with Turkish parents is a party moderate and outspoken critic of Turkish President Erdogan. He co-chaired the Green Party for close to a decade.
Image: Getty Images/AFP/J. MacDougall
Environment, Nature Conservation, Nuclear Safety and Consumer Protection Minister Steffi Lemke (Greens)
The ministry with the longest name has gone to the much-respected Steffi Lemke, among the handful who co-founded the Greens' East German branch in 1989. During her first spell in the Bundestag (1994-2002), she was also one of the few Green Party parliamentarians to initially oppose German participation in the Afghan war.
Image: Hendrik Schmidt/picture alliance/dpa
Transport and Digital Infrastructure Minister Volker Wissing (FDP)
FDP General Secretary Volker Wissing is the party's second most powerful politician after leader Christian Lindner. He spent five years as Rhineland-Palatinate's Economy Minister in a coalition with the SPD and the Greens. Although the hugely popular €9 ticket in the summer of 2022 was his brainchild, Wissing is known mainly for refusing to implement a speed limit on German motorways.
Image: Michael Kappeler/picture alliance/dpa
Construction and Housing Minister Klara Geywitz (SPD)
One of only two East Germans in the new Cabinet, Klara Geywitz heads a new ministry set up at the insistence of the SPD. Housing has become an acute issue in Germany, where urban areas are fast running out of affordable housing. Geywitz's ambitious announcement that 400,000 new units would be constructed each year seems to have proved unrealistic.
Image: Imago Images/M. Müller
Labor and Social Affairs Minister Hubertus Heil (SPD)
Heil held the same post in the previous government. During his first year in the new government, he led the overhaul of the social security scheme, and the increase in Germany's minimum wage to €12 ($13.60) an hour.
Economic Cooperation and Development Minister Svenja Schulze (SPD)
Angela Merkel's last environment minister became Scholz's first development minister. The outspoken opponent of nuclear power is a member of several environmental organizations. As the government is failing to phase-out fossil fuels as it scrambled to replace Russian gas imports in 2022, environment and climate policy has come under fire from activists.
Image: Birgit Maass/DW
Education and Research Minister Bettina Stark-Watzinger (FDP)
Stark-Watzinger was part of the party's negotiating team in coalition negotiations and is a specialist in finance and education policy. She has called for an "educational revolution" in Germany, ushering in a major digitalized overhaul of the current system. Earlier in her live, she lived in the UK for nine years.
Image: Michael Kappeler/picture alliance/dpa
Family Affairs, Senior Citizens, Women and Youth Minister Lisa Paus (Greens)
An economist by training, Paus has served as a Member of the German Bundestag for the city-state of Berlin since 2009. She has put the fight against human rights violations against children and women at the center of her ministry's work.
Image: Felix Zahn/photothek/picture alliance
Chief of Staff and Minister for Special Affairs Wolfgang Schmidt (SPD)
Scholz's right-hand man in the Cabinet is Wolfgang Schmidt, who worked with Scholz when he was mayor of Hamburg. Chief of staff with a special ministerial brief that gives the chancellorship extra weight in the Cabinet, Schmidt's role largely involves coordinating the ministerial work of the three parties.
Image: Kay Nietfeld/picture alliance/dpa
Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media Claudia Roth (Greens)
Claudia Roth moved into the spotlight of German cultural policy. Within the Chancellor's office, she is also responsible for DW. Former party leader Roth is one of the most prominent faces of the Greens. Most recently, the former manager of the anarchist band Ton Steine Scherben was Vice President of the Bundestag.
Image: Kay Nietfeld/dpa/picture alliance
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