Maik Eminger
Maik Eminger (* 1979 ) is a German right-wing extremist . He was the base leader of the Young National Democrats in Potsdam , is today in the party “ The III. Weg “active and is considered a leading figure in the right-wing extremist comradeship scene in Brandenburg . The Brandenburg Office for the Protection of the Constitution describes Eminger as a long-time active and influential neo-Nazi socialist (s) well connected across national borders ". "Prisoner Aid ".
Life
Youth, radicalization and activity in Thuringia
Maik Eminger grew up in Johanngeorgenstadt in Saxony in the Ore Mountains . He and his twin brother André Eminger first went to high school, but then switched to middle school and graduated from secondary school there in 1996. The father of the family, with a total of four children, was a ski jumper in the GDR national B team and during this time he achieved a certain regional awareness. Maik and Andre Eminger were also talented ski jumpers in their youth .
From the mid-1990s, they turned to neo-Nazism, which is strongly anchored in the subculture of the region . After researching the time , the right-wing extremist sentiments of the brothers differentiated in the mid-1990s: André Eminger began listening to right-wing rock and turned to the blood and honor skinhead scene. Maik Eminger, on the other hand, was more interested in the German cult, ethnic ideas and racial studies and was described as the more intellectual of the two. The Eminger brothers built up the "White Brotherhood of the Erzgebirge (WBE)"; whose motto: “White Pride is our religion” ( sic! ) refers to the idea of a “ white revolution ”. Andre and Maik Eminger edited the trendy magazine “ The Aryan Law & Order ”.
The twin brothers Maik and André Eminger were active in the " Brigade Ost ", from which a number of supporters of the NSU were recruited.
Eminger moved to Lower Saxony sometime between 1997 and 2004 and was active there in the environment of the NPD squad Jürgen Rieger .
Move to Brandenburg
In 2005 Eminger moved with his wife Sylvia Eminger and their five children to a farm in Grabow , a small district of the municipality of Mühlenfließ in Potsdam-Mittelmark. Since then he has been cultivating Germanic customs there, celebrating the turn of the summer. He works as a tattoo artist .
Eminger was involved in the " New Order " movement, which was banned in 2006 , based on the group of neo-Nazi terrorists in the USA who also called themselves New Order . He was also in the Schutzbund Germany and was responsible for the organization's leaflets. In 2008 he became "Base Manager Potsdam" of the Young National Democrats . Maik Eminger conducted ideological training courses in which he wanted to convey the definition of "race" and "national community".
After the terrorists Mundlos and Böhnhardt died in 2011 and Zschäpe surrendered to the police, Andre Eminger and his two children fled to his brother in Grabow. On the morning of November 24, 2011, the GSG 9 stormed Eminger's house in Brandenburg with more than 20 officers. In a plastic bag, € 3,835 was found at Andre Eminger's.
The Potsdamer Neue Nachrichten reported in 2015 that Eminger was the victim of a serious traffic accident in the summer of 2013. A car driver overtook a parked car and then collided head-on with an oncoming motorcycle. The motorcyclist was Maik Eminger. He suffered serious injuries and was evacuated by rescue helicopter. According to PNN, the accident happened in a village right in front of a kebab shop. Their migrant employees gave Eminger first aid and thus saved Eminger's life.
III. Weg and the "prisoner aid"
According to the Brandenburg Office for the Protection of the Constitution , Maik Eminger is now one of the leading figures in the support network for prisoners' aid (right-wing extremist organization) . Security authorities see it as the successor organization of the 2011 banned " Aid Organization for National Prisoners ". In 2015 he started the work of the neo-Nazi splinter party “ The III. Weg ”in the state of Brandenburg. He founded the "base Potsdam-Mittelmark".
Maik Eminger was one of the keynote speakers at the Day of the German Future in Neuruppin 2015. In September 2015, the Brandenburg District Court imposed a six-month suspended sentence against Eminger for sedition . Maik Eminger wore a "Prisoner Aid" t-shirt at the trial. At an NPD demonstration on February 23, 2014 in the Bad Belziger new building area Klinkengrund, he called out loans from the NSDAP program to his supporters, "German citizens, comrades". They ended with a crude comparison, which was also part of the application. Eminger spoke of "Negro blood". Like his brother Andre Eminger later in the NSU trial , Eminger never commented on the allegations against him.
Individual evidence
- ^ Christian Unger, Alexander Kohnen and Miguel Sanches: Unrestrained, ready for violence - right-wing propaganda . ( Morgenpost.de [accessed on July 16, 2018]).
- ↑ a b c d Neo-National Socialists | Defense of Constitution. Retrieved July 12, 2018 .
- ↑ a b POSITION: A wide field of open questions . In: Potsdam's latest news . April 29, 2016 ( pnn.de [accessed July 18, 2018]).
- ^ Konrad Litschko: André Eminger in the NSU trial: The quietest helper . In: The daily newspaper: taz . July 24, 2017, ISSN 0931-9085 ( taz.de [accessed July 12, 2018]).
- ↑ a b Alexander Fröhlich: Maik Eminger - leading figure in the neo-Nazi scene: saved the life of foreigners . In: Potsdam's latest news . June 6, 2015 ( pnn.de [accessed July 16, 2018]).
- ↑ Three years probation for Maik Eminger - malfunction reporter . In: Malfunction reporter . April 20, 2016 ( zeit.de [accessed July 16, 2018]).
- ↑ Brandenburg neo-Nazi convicted of agitation. Retrieved on July 16, 2018 (German).
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Eminger, Maik |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German right-wing extremist |
DATE OF BIRTH | 1979 |