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16 Dec, 2014 08:26

Groundswell: 15,000 join anti-Islamization rally in Dresden

Up to 15,000 people have marched against “asylum cheats” in anti-Islamization rally in Dresden, Germany. The group’s protests are attracting bigger crowds every week since its first rally in October, which gathered just a few hundred people.

READ MORE:UN urges EU to take refugees despite anti-migrant protests

Nationalist activists carried banners reading “Zero tolerance towards criminal asylum seekers”, “Protect our homeland” and “Stop the Islamisation”.

They chanted: "If you don't love Germany, leave it" and "We're the people” (German: “Wir sind das Volk”).

“Muslims are plotting to infect our food chain with their excrement,” one of the participants told the Guardian.

“Asylum seekers in Germany have expensive mobile phones, while I cannot afford such luxury and others still cannot afford to eat properly,” added a middle-aged woman.

Participants hold up their mobile phones during a demonstration called by anti-immigration group PEGIDA, a German abbreviation for "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West", in Dresden December 15, 2014. (Reuters)

"If you sleep in a democracy you wake up in a dictatorship" slogan @ #Pegida demo in Dresden (slogan could be L or R) pic.twitter.com/yenKkLRon4

— Kate Connolly (@connollyberlin) December 15, 2014

The organizer of the event, Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the Occident (PEGIDA) is gathering momentum to protest plans to add 14 centers for roughly 2,000 refugees in the eastern city of Dresden.

READ MORE:Thousands in Dresden rally against Islamization, call for Western values

"The people are with us!" PEGIDA founder Lutz Bachmann addressed the crowd of people who were either waving or draped in German flags, "Everywhere now, in every news rag, on every senseless talk show, they are debating, and the most important thing is: the politicians can no longer ignore us!"

Participants hold up their mobile phones during a demonstration called by anti-immigration group PEGIDA, a German abbreviation for "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West", in Dresden December 8, 2014. (Reuters)

According to demonstrators Michael Stuerzenberger, "70 percent of people claiming political asylum here are economic refugees. We don't want to stay silent about this anymore."

"We don't want a flood of asylum seekers, we don't want Islamization. We want to keep our country with our values. Is that so terrible? Does that make us Nazis? Is it a crime to be a patriot?” he told AFP.

Supporters of the PEGIDA movement, "Patriotische Europaeer Gegen die Islamisierung des Abendlandes," which translates to "Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamification of the Occident," take part in a rally in Dresden, Eastern Germany on December 15, 2014. (AFP Photo)

In the meantime, about 6,000 opponents of PEGIDA organized a counter-demonstration the same day. They were carrying banners, saying "Dresden Nazi-free" and "Dresden for All".

Anti-Islamization protesters also gathered for the rally dubbed BOGIDA the city of Bonn.

In #Dresden, #Pegida protestors are gathering for what is expected to be the biggest demo yet http://t.co/rMtGGKGjZdpic.twitter.com/ypUPNCq0Ck

— DW (English) (@dw_english) December 15, 2014

Anti-Islam 'Pegida' march in German city of Dresden @BBCNews@radio3mondo@luigispinolahttp://t.co/ujhsAJRvE9pic.twitter.com/AB6a3WXfwQ

— Rai Radio3 (@Radio3tweet) December 16, 2014

Anti-Islamization protesters also gathered for the rally dubbed BOGIDA the city of Bonn.

On their Facebook page, the group described the demonstration as a "peaceful evening stroll against Salafists in Bonn, the Islamization of the occident and misled refugee and immigrant policy in Germany."

#Bogida drowned out by boos and chants from counter movement and passers by in #Bonn#Pegidapic.twitter.com/mlUnVwS9k5

— Kate Brady (@kbrady90) December 15, 2014

The group was met by counter-demonstration which outnumbered them and thus blocked their march, shouting “Nazis out!"

RT TRobinsonNewEra: Up to 15,000 to take part in anti-Islam rally in Dresden-GERMANY http://t.co/zBCaM8NgE4 . pic.twitter.com/pgVgakvWjt

— Comedy (@ComedyLoLL) December 16, 2014

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has slammed the anti-Islamization march, warning the people of falling into the hands of xenophobia.

"Of course there's freedom to demonstrate in Germany," Merkel said, "But it's no place for agitation and mud-slinging against people who come to us from other countries."

"That's why everyone should watch out that they aren't being used as instruments by the initiators of an event like this,” she added.

PEGIDA’s initial march drew just a few hundred people in October. The demonstration on Monday, December 1 attracted 7,500.

The following Monday saw at least 10,000 take to the streets of Dresden. The protesters said they want to preserve Germany’s Judeo-Christian Western culture and curb the spread of Islamic State and Al-Qaeda activities in the EU.

15.000 bei Pegida in Dresden: Hier demonstriert die Mischpoke http://t.co/Zi71dmYWCZ via @ntvde

— Harald Vogelgesang (@HaraldHarry1) December 16, 2014

15,000 #Pegida-Anhänger demonstrieren in #Dresdenhttp://t.co/OhR0DPAMi2pic.twitter.com/qD8MLGVbGY

— 嵐 (ARASHI) (@Tentuil) December 16, 2014

PEGIDA distances itself from neo-Nazi groups in Germany. On its Facebook page, it says German children “can grow up in a cosmopolitan and friendly nation" and it "refuses to allow the spread of activities by groups such as the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda in Europe."

Anti-Islam rallies were held in Cologne, Hanover, Kassel, and Chemnitz.

Participants hold a banner during a demonstration called by anti-immigration group PEGIDA, a German abbreviation for "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West", in Dresden December 15, 2014. (Reuters)

Demonstrationen: SPD-Generalsekretärin wirft Pegida vor, Hass zu schüren (zeit.de) http://t.co/vqF2R7PcHWpic.twitter.com/WeR1PKrB5n

— 1001portails Deutsch (@1001ptsDE) December 16, 2014

READ MORE:‘Hooligans against Salafists’: Violence erupts at huge far-right rally in Cologne

Germany is the second most-favored destination after the US for refugees and asylum seekers, says a report by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). In 2013, more than 450,000 people came to Germany as migrants.

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