(London Telegraph) The wave of anti-Islam protests gripping the German city of Dresden have ignited a political row, after the leader of the country’s rapidly growing Eurosceptic party publicly backed the protesters.
Ten thousand people took to the streets of Dresden on Monday in the latest in a series of weekly rallies under the banner of Patriotic Europeans against the Islamisation of Europe, or Pegida, to protest against what they say is the erosion of Germany’s Judeo-Christian culture by Muslim immigrants.
Bernd Lucke, the leader of the anti-Euro Alternative for Germany party (AfD), provoked outrage when he backed the protesters on his Facebook page, saying it is “good and right” that people are giving voice to their fears.