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12 Jan, 2015 13:03

‘Rabble-rousers’: German minister urges anti-Islam rally to be canceled

‘Rabble-rousers’: German minister urges anti-Islam rally to be canceled

The German justice minister has called the organizers of the anti-Islamization PEGIDA rally to cancel their planned Monday demonstration, out of respect for the victims of the Charlie Hebdo shootings and the three days of terror in Paris.

READ MORE: Thousands protest ‘Nazism, racism’ amid huge anti-Islam rallies in Germany (VIDEO)

"If the organizers had a shred of decency they would simply cancel these demonstrations," Germany’s Justice Minister Heiko Maas told the Bild newspaper.

The participants of the rally scheduled this Monday were asked to wear black armbands and observe a minute's silence to commemorate “the victims of terrorism in Paris.”

READ MORE: March for Unity: Over 40 world leaders, 'up to 3mn' rally in Paris against extremism

"The victims [of recent France attacks] don’t deserve to be abused by rabble-rousers like these," said Maas, "It's just disgusting how the people behind these demos are exploiting the heinous crimes in Paris.”

Participants take part in a demonstration called by anti-immigration group PEGIDA, a German abbreviation for "Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West", in Dresden January 5, 2015. (Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch)

He added that PEGIDA rally organizers want to commemorate France’s massacre victims “that last week they insulted as lying journalists.”

Supporters and opponents of the Patriotic Europeans against the Islamization of the West (PEGIDA) group have been hitting the streets in Germany in record numbers since October. Initially, the rallies drew only a few hundred people.

However, the numbers have grown every successive Monday since October 20, with the January 5 demo attracting over 18,000 people.

READ MORE: Arson at German paper that reprinted Charlie Hebdo cartoons (VIDEO)

The group accuses mainstream media of lying about immigration and dozens of other issues.

German Justice Minister Heiko Maas (AFP Photo/Johannes Eisele)

PEGIDA supporters refer to themselves as “patriots,” who are worried about the “watering down” of Germany’s Christian culture and values.

The group is trying to distance itself from the far-right movement, coming out against “preachers of hate, regardless of what religion,” and “radicalism, regardless of whether religiously or politically motivated” in its mission statement. All uses of neo-Nazi symbols to represent the group have also been banned.

Members advocate a “zero-tolerance” policy for asylum seekers with criminal convictions, but say they welcome the admission of war refugees and those fleeing religious or political persecution.

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

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

Demonstrators wave with German national flags during a rally by a mounting right-wing populist movement called Pegida on January 5, 2015 in Dresden, eastern Germany. (AFP Photo/Robert Michael)

Many politicians have spoken out against PEGIDA, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel even touching upon the subject in her New Year’s address. Merkel asked Germans to keep away from the group’s rallies saying that PEGIDA’s “we are the people” slogan means “you don’t belong because of your religion or your skin.”

READ MORE: Merkel lashes out at anti-Islamic protests while 1 in 8 Germans would attend

Merkel and the majority of her cabinet will join a rally for an "open and tolerant Germany”, organized by Muslim leaders in Berlin on Tuesday, government spokesman Georg Streiter said.

"We Muslims in Germany condemn the despicable terror attacks in France in the strongest terms," the group said in its invitation. "There is no justification in Islam for such acts."

The organizers are planning to send a message to the PEGIDA movement.

"Those who use racist and Islamophobic slogans strengthen the rabble-rousers, inciters of hatred and terrorists," the invitation added.

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