German intelligence warns of far-right mobilizing against refugees
People take part in the right-wing ,Offensive fu00fcr Deutschland, (Offensive for Germany) protest rally against refugees in Leipzig, eastern Germany on September 26, 2015 (AFP Photo)


Germany's domestic intelligence chief warned Sunday of a radicalization of right-wing groups amid a record influx of migrants, as xenophobic rallies and clashes shook several towns over the weekend. Meanwhile, President Joachim Gauck warned of Germany's "finite capacity" to absorb refugees, cautioning against more "tensions between newcomers and established residents."Domestic spy chief Hans-Georg Maassen said that "what we're seeing in connection with the refugee crisis is a mobilization on the street of right-wing extremists, but also of some left-wing extremists who oppose them." He added, speaking on Deutschlandfunk public radio, that for the past few years his service had witnessed a "radicalization" and "a greater willingness to use violence" by all extremist groups, including the far right, the anti-fascist far-left and religious extremists.Maassen spoke as Germany expects to receive up to one million migrants this year, and after protests against refugee homes and clashes with police again rocked several towns, mostly in the former communist East Germany. Police and soldiers guarded two buses carrying about 100 migrants Saturday night to a shelter in the town of Niederau, in the eastern Saxony state, after right-wing protesters had rallied at the site, a former supermarket, since Friday. More than 1,000 people also demonstrated against refugees in several towns in the eastern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Friday, including in coastal Stralsund where three people were wounded in clashes with counter-protesters.In the eastern city of Leipzig, the right-wing rally "Offensive for Germany," organized by local anti-Islam activists with about 400 marchers, sparked a larger counter-protest that police said drew more than 1,000 activists. In the ensuing street clashes, the rival groups hurled rocks and fireworks at each other. In the western city of Bremen unidentified people attempted to set fire to a tent that was to house refugees in October.This year alone has seen 22 arson attacks against would-be or existing refugee shelters, said Maassen, whose service is called the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution. Gauck, in an evening speech, urged "a broad social debate" on managing the influx, to ensure a "humane reception policy into the future." "Our hearts are wide open, but our capabilities are finite," Gauck said, according to the pre-released text of a speech he was to give in the western city of Mainz. "Given the rapid influx," he said, the government must now "promote the construction of apartments and build schools, hire teachers and kindergarten staff, adjust the labor market and vocational training, teach the German language and German law -- and do all of that at the same time."Gauck called Germany's massive volunteer efforts to welcome the migrants a "grassroots movement of humanity," but also warned of more impending "tensions between newcomers and established residents." Such conflicts could be best avoided, he said, when "neither side feels it is getting a bad deal."The dramatic rise in refugees, mostly coming from Syria, has been followed by increasing attacks against refugees fueled by xenophobia. Anti-immigration ideology and xenophobia have become more visible in the country as a result of the efforts of political parties like the NPD and Alternative for Germany (AFD), as well as anti-Islam and anti-immigrant initiatives like Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West (PEGIDA), which have staged anti-immigrant rallies and drawn thousands of people throughout Europe, especially in Germany.