German police have launched a large-scale operation against a suspected far-right group believed to have acquired military-grade weapons, including fully automatic firearms.
The raids targeted eight individuals aged 32 to 57 who are believed to have formed an armed group based on right-wing extremist ideology, according to a joint statement from the Celle Public Prosecutor's Office and Lower Saxony State Criminal Police Office on Tuesday.
Authorities conducted searches at more than a dozen locations across three German states: Lower Saxony (Hannover region, Hildesheim city and district), Baden-Wurttemberg (Pforzheim district), and North Rhine-Westphalia (Lippe district).
The operation involved special police forces and built upon earlier investigative measures that had already led to the seizure of a pistol and ammunition.
Growing concern
According to the statement, a primary goal of Tuesday's raids was to locate and secure additional weapons while gathering information about the group's activities.
The police action comes amid growing concern about far-right extremism in Germany, where authorities have intensified efforts to combat politically motivated violence and illegal weapons possession among extremist groups.
Official figures show that neo-Nazis and far-right extremists committed 42,788 crimes in Germany last year — the highest number in over a decade.
They perpetrated 1,488 violent attacks against migrants, refugees, or political opponents, marking a 17 percent increase from the previous year. These attacks left at least 1,068 people injured.