German neo-Nazis were suspected of being behind threats to "behead" a conservative politician for continuing to back a controversial refugee housing project yesterday, less than 48 hours after a village building earmarked for the scheme was set ablaze by unknown assailants.
Christian Democrat politician Gotz Ulrich, from the east German state of Saxony Anhalt, said that suspected neo-Nazis had threatened to behead him for supporting plans for a 40-bed refugee hostel in Troglitz, a village in his constituency which is notorious for neo-Nazi activity.
The development was the latest case of overt neo-Nazi intimidation to blight Troglitz, a village of 2700 inhabitants and the focus of far right opposition to the liberal asylum policies of Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition.
On Saturday, however, shocked Troglitz residents awoke to find the roof of the new - and as yet empty - refugee hostel had been destroyed by fire. Officials said one or more people broke in and started the blaze at 2am. "Everything in this case points to deliberate arson," said Germany's Interior Minister, Thomas de Maiziere.
The NPD remains legal in Germany despite government attempts to ban the organisation and has seats in two state parliaments in east Germany. It stands accused of deliberately bussing in its adherents to Troglitz to foment unrest.
Mr Nierth, who resigned to draw attention to the fact that he had not been given sufficient police protection and felt his family was threatened, insisted: "We can't let the Nazis win in our town." He said he was shattered by the apparent arson attack: "I am stunned, sad and furious at the same time, Troglitz will never recover from this."
After his resignation, the hostel was overseen by Mr Ulrich, MP in the Saxony Anhalt state government, who received threats to behead him after insisting, despite the fire, the project would go ahead.
