German government condemns ‘unacceptable’ attempt to storm Reichstag
The German government Sunday slammed the
“unacceptable” behavior of protestors during a mass rally against coronavirus
restrictions in which hundreds were arrested and some attempted to storm the
Reichstag parliament building.
The Reichstag is the “symbolic center of our
democracy,” Interior Minister Horst Seehofer told Sunday’s edition of the Bild
newspaper.
“It is unacceptable to see extremists and
trouble-makers use it for their own ends.”
Police said about 38,000 people, double the number
expected, had gathered in Berlin on Saturday to protest against restrictions
imposed to curb the spread of the coronavirus, such as the wearing of masks and
social distancing.
Late Saturday, several hundred protestors broke
through barriers and a police cordon to climb the steps leading to the entrance
to the Reichstag.
They were narrowly prevented from entering the
building by police, who used pepper spray and arrested several people.
The Reichstag, where German deputies meet, has a
powerful symbolic role in the country.
The building, with its famous dome, was burnt down
by the Nazis in 1933 in an act aimed at destroying what remained of German
democracy between the two world wars.
“Plurality of opinions” is a “characteristic of the
good functioning of society,” said Seehofer. But “freedom of assembly reaches
its limits when public rules are trampled on.”
About 300 people were arrested in scuffles with
police, in front of the Reichstag but also outside the Russian embassy not far
from there in the city center, where protestors pelted police with bottles.



