Difference between revisions of "Pegida Österreich"
Hilary Aked (talk | contribs) m (→Activities) |
Hilary Aked (talk | contribs) m (→Activities) |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
''The Local'' reports that some supporters were seen performing Nazi salutes and that spokesperson [[Immanuel Nagel]], who soon resigned his position, had written articles that reportedly 'incited hatred against foreigners'.<ref name="Local">[http://www.thelocal.at/20150204/vienna-pegida-spokesman-steps-down Vienna's Pegida spokesman steps down], The Local, 4 February 2015</ref> | ''The Local'' reports that some supporters were seen performing Nazi salutes and that spokesperson [[Immanuel Nagel]], who soon resigned his position, had written articles that reportedly 'incited hatred against foreigners'.<ref name="Local">[http://www.thelocal.at/20150204/vienna-pegida-spokesman-steps-down Vienna's Pegida spokesman steps down], The Local, 4 February 2015</ref> | ||
− | A second march was reportedly planned in Linz, | + | A second march was reportedly planned in Linz, northern Austria, for 8 February 2015.<ref name="Local"/> This took place but attracted only an estimate 150 people and was dwarfed by a counter-protest of around 2,000 anti-racism demonstrators.<ref>Rosie Waites[http://www.thelocal.at/20150208/pegida-in-linz-meets-fierce-resistance Pegida in Linz meets fierce resistance], The Local, 8 February 2015</ref> |
==People== | ==People== |
Revision as of 11:25, 13 February 2015
Pegida Österreich is the Austrian version of the anti-immigration, anti-Islam PEGIDA movement which began in Dresden, Germany.
Activities
Pegida Österreich held a demonstration in the Austrian capital Vienna on 2 February 2015 that drew just 200 people and reportedly 5,000 counter-protesters. Deutshe Welle notes that before the PEGIDA march swastikas had been graffitied on a Vienna mosque. In December, a pig's head had been left outside a different mosque in the capital.[1]
The Local reports that some supporters were seen performing Nazi salutes and that spokesperson Immanuel Nagel, who soon resigned his position, had written articles that reportedly 'incited hatred against foreigners'.[2]
A second march was reportedly planned in Linz, northern Austria, for 8 February 2015.[2] This took place but attracted only an estimate 150 people and was dwarfed by a counter-protest of around 2,000 anti-racism demonstrators.[3]
People
- Immanuel Nagel - spokesperson, resigned 4 February 2015[2]
Notes
- ↑ PEGIDA and counter-demonstrations come to Austria, Deutsche Welle, 2 February 2015, accessed 3 February 2015
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Vienna's Pegida spokesman steps down, The Local, 4 February 2015
- ↑ Rosie WaitesPegida in Linz meets fierce resistance, The Local, 8 February 2015