German officials expect more arrests linked to an alleged far-right plan to topple the government which saw 25 people rounded up on Wednesday, including a self-styled prince, a retired paratrooper and a judge.
The plot was allegedly hatched by people associated with the so-called Reich Citizens movement, which rejects Germany’s postwar constitution and the government’s legitimacy.
Georg Meier, the top security official in Thuringia state, told public broadcaster Deutschlandfunk on Thursday he expects a second wave of people being detained as authorities review evidence.
Mr Meier accused the far-right Alternative for Germany party of fuelling conspiracy theories similar to those which allegedly motivated the plotters detained across the country this week.
Those held include a former Alternative for Germany politician Birgit Malsack-Winkemann, who is also a Berlin judge. The party condemned the alleged coup plans.
Also detained was Heinrich XIII Prince Reuss, whom prosecutors consider one of the two ringleaders of the plot.
The 71-year-old member of the House of Reuss continues to use the title of ‘prince’ despite Germany abolishing any formal role for royalty over a century ago.
Some in Germany have questioned whether the suspected extremists would actually have been able to pull off any serious attack.
But Germany’s top security official, interior minister Nancy Faeser, said it would be wrong to underestimate such groups, especially if their members include people who are trained to use firearms, such as soldiers or police officers.
The head of Germany’s Federal Criminal Police, Holger Muench, said officers searched about 150 locations across the country.
At about 50 locations they found weapons, he told public broadcaster ZDF late on Wednesday without elaborating.
Mr Muench said he expects the raids and detentions to continue in the coming days.
Thomas Haldenwang, who heads Germany’s domestic intelligence agency BfV, said authorities had been monitoring the group since spring.
The threat posed by the group gradually became more concrete as members obtained weapons, he said.
Germany is highly sensitive to far-right extremism because of its Nazi past and repeated acts of violence carried out by neo-Nazis in recent years, including the killing of a regional politician and the deadly attack on a synagogue in 2019.
Two years ago, far-right extremists taking part in a protest against the country’s pandemic restrictions tried and failed to storm the Bundestag building in Berlin.