EU Dozens are injured at an Eritrean event in Germany, including 26 police officers


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BERLIN (AP) — German police said dozens of people, including at least 26 officers, were injured during unrest surrounding an Eritrean cultural festival in the southwestern city of Stuttgart.

Shortly before the event was set to begin Saturday afternoon, around 200 protesters gathered in the area outside and began throwing stones, bottles, and other items at police officers and participants of the event. Six of the 26 injured police officers were treated in a hospital for their injuries, police said. Four event participants and two protesters were also injured, according to police, although information wasn’t immediately available about the severity of their injuries.

Saturday’s protests were the latest in a string of unrest surrounding Eritrean cultural events in Germany and elsewhere. In July, a clash at an Eritrean festival in the western German city of Giessen left 22 police officers injured. A fight between Eritrean government supporters and opponents in Tel Aviv in early September led to one of the most violent street confrontations among African asylum seekers and migrants in the city’s recent memory.

The event Saturday was organized by several groups considered close to the government of Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki.

Tens of thousands of people have fled Eritrea for Europe, many alleging they were mistreated by Isaias’ repressive government. The conflicts surrounding gatherings like Saturday’s highlight the deep divide among members of the Eritrean diaspora, those who remain close to the government and those who have fled to live in exile and strongly oppose Isaias.

On Saturday, Stuttgart police vice president Carsten Hoefler condemned the protesters’ actions and said in a statement that “neither the extent nor the intensity of the violence was apparent in advance.”

City officials said there had been no reason to ban the gathering in advance, but that they will take steps to prevent similar unrest in the future.

“We must take decisive action against the emergence of conflicts from other states on German soil,” said Stuttgart Mayor Frank Nopper, according to German news agency dpa.
 
Saturday’s protests were the latest in a string of unrest surrounding Eritrean cultural events in Germany and elsewhere. In July, a clash at an Eritrean festival in the western German city of Giessen left 22 police officers injured.
I was going to say this was old news, but it's not, it happened again :story:

If they like Afwerki so much why the fuck do they live in Germany?
 
Between this event and the one in Israel Eritreans seem really good at exporting their internal strife to other nations. In bygone eras Europeans (and jews) would respond to this kind of shenannigans by blowing shit up where they came from until they put aside their differences and came to hate their betters more strongly than they hate each other. And then, depending on the specific location either shoot them or beat them into submission with billy clubs. Or do like the french like to do and use 40mm foam kinetic rounds fired out of grenade launchers.
 
Only 26? And no fatalities? Those are rookie numbers. Try harder next time, everyone.
 
If only there was some kind of common factor all the attendants of these festivals had that would make it easy to see it coming in advance.
 
I'm kinda debating if I should just show up in Germany and demand free shit while working remote hours for American wages and telling the German feds to not bother me with my tax situation and constantly threaten to call them Hitler so I get free shit 24/7.
 
Unlikely. The roads are too clogged and the public transport too unreliable to get all the combatants to the agreed arena relibably and on time.
Even the trains? You'd think a country of autists would have a wonderfully efficient train network.
 
It have also happend in Sweden as well.
These events are organized by the regime in Eritrea and those who protests/riot are those who have fled Eritrea.
 
Even the trains? You'd think a country of autists would have a wonderfully efficient train network.
The German train network on paper is pretty decent. But in practice constant delays and cancellations make it one of the worst if not the worst in western Europe. It's a running gag among Germans how bad the Deutsche Bahn is and hating it is the one thing that brings Germans together.
 
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