
The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) in the eastern state of Brandenburg is taking back its lawsuit against a domestic intelligence agency which had classified it as a suspected far-right extremist party six years ago, justice authorities said Friday.
The announcement was made by the Potsdam Administrative Court.
The lawsuit also referred to a mention in official reports in 2019 and 2020 by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution, which is the official name of the domestic intelligence agency.
The court said that oral arguments scheduled for January 14 and 15 will be cancelled.
The state chairman of the AfD in Brandenburg, René Springer, explained the reasons for the move: "With the classification as 'confirmed right-wing extremist' that has now taken place, the previous lawsuits against the observation as a suspected case have been settled."
There was no longer any legal basis for the proceedings, he added. The withdrawal of the lawsuit was a formal step following what Springer called a "politically motivated escalation."
"The decisive question remains the new classification," Springer asserted.
According to the court, the Brandenburg AfD's lawsuit against the classification of the regional association as a confirmed right-wing extremist organisation in 2025 will continue to be reviewed.
A date for a hearing has not yet been set.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
2024 Style: The It-Things You Want in Your Closet - 2
Tesla Germany Registrations Quadruple to 9,252 Vehicles in Best March Ever - 3
'Malcolm in the Middle' reboot releases 1st trailer, reuniting Frankie Muniz and Bryan Cranston: Watch here - 4
Hitting the brakes: Hubble Space Telescope watches doomed comet reverse its spin - 5
Huge rotating structure of galaxies and dark matter is detected
Artemis II astronauts are more than halfway to the moon as they seek to break Apollo 13's record
The Job of a Migration Legal advisor: How They Can Help You
April's full moon decides the date of Easter — here's how it works
Addressing sleep apnea early might decrease chances of developing Parkinson's disease
80 km. on foot: Sharren Haskel’s three-day march in protest of haredi draft bill
Climate change is straining Alaska's Arctic. A new mining road may push the region past the brink
Manual for Tracking down the Immaculate Magnificence of Focal Asia
Wizz CEO: We’re going to invest $1 b. in Israeli market
100 new alien worlds: Scientists find hidden haul in data from NASA exoplanet-hunting spacecraft













