Germany has outlawed a far-right neo-Nazi group called “Sturmbrigade 44” for spreading hatred, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer said on Tuesday.
Seehofer said the group, also known as “Wolfsbrigade 44,” “sows hatred” and “advocates the reestablishment of a Nazi state.”
“Anyone who fights against the fundamental values of our liberal society will feel the determined reaction of the constitutional state,” the minister said in a statement.
Early on Tuesday, almost 200 police officers began searches of premises linked to 11 alleged members of the group in a number of regional states.
Police found weapons, including knives and crossbows, as well as propaganda items such as swastikas and Nazi flags, the interior ministry said.
Members “openly declared their support for Adolf Hitler,” the ministry said, adding that the group was “particularly characterized by militaristic appearance” and “pronounced racism” as part of an “inhuman ideology.”
In July last year, prosecutors raided apartments in several German states of members accused of being part of the group, which was founded in 2016.
Six were suspected of having formed an armed group within the organization, authorities said at the time.
The news comes amid continued heightened tension surrounding far-right extremism in Germany.
Last month, federal prosecutors charged 12 alleged far-right conspirators suspected of planning terrorist attacks on politicians, asylum-seekers and Muslims.