Germany reopens hate speech and gun law debates after shisha bar killings

German flags fly at half-mast for the victims of a shooting that left several people dead in Hanau near Frankfurt in front of the Reichstag building the seat of the lower house of parliament Bundestag in Berlin Germany February 21 2020. REUTERSFabrizio Bensch

German flags fly at half-mast for the victims of two shootings that left nine people dead in Hanau

BERLIN, Feb 23 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Germany faced calls to toughen gun ownership laws and step up efforts to track far-right sympathisers after the suspect in one of its worst mass shootings since World War Two was found to have published a racist manifesto.

The 43-year-old presumed killer of nine people in two shisha bars in the southwestern town of Hanau late on Wednesday had posted the document, espousing conspiracy theories and deeply racist views, online.

The suspect, who is believed to have killed himself and his mother after the shootings, belonged to a gun club, raising questions as to how a man with such ideological convictions managed to gain membership and obtain the weapons he used.

“We need new and stricter laws to regularly and thoroughly check owners of hunting and firearm licences,” Bild – Germany’s biggest-selling newspaper – wrote on its front page. “We immediately need more (intelligence) positions to monitor right-wing radicals and intervene before it’s too late.”

Interior Minister Horst Seehofer later told Bild that the government would initiate reforms to intensify checks on gun owners. “This is not only about the question of whether someone has properly stored his weapon or kept the ammunition separate from it – it must also be about very personal matters,” he said.

The ministry subsequently said in a statement that it was looking at making such checks in cases where gun owners were conspicuous to the authorities, and that across-the-board psychiatric tests would not be introduced.

Federal Prosecutor General Peter Frank said on Friday that the suspect had a licence for two weapons, and it remained unclear whether he had contacts with other far-right sympathisers at home or abroad.

Frank added that the gunman had sent a letter to prosecutors in November complaining about an unknown intelligence agency with powers to control people’s thoughts and actions. — NNN-AGENCIES

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