Organizers said they expected over 10,000 people to attend demonstrations in eastern Saxony state. The far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) is polling in second place ahead of upcoming federal elections.
Thousands of left-wing demonstrators from across Germany gathered in the town of Riesa in Saxony on Saturday, aiming to disrupt a convention held by
A convention of a far-right party is being met by protests in Germany as it and other major parties launch their campaigns for the country’s election next month.
Tens of thousands of people gathered for a glitzy array of festivities in the eastern German city of Chemnitz on Saturday as it took over the mantle of European Capital of Culture. Under the motto "C the Unseen,
Thousands of protesters have descended on the town of Riesa to disrupt the right-wing Alternative for Germany party convention Read Full Article at RTcom
Alternative for Germany, or AfD, is holding a two-day gathering in Riesa — in the eastern state of Saxony, one of its strongholds — to formally nominate co-leader Alice Weidel as its candidate ...
Thousands of demonstrators protested against the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party on Saturday, obstructing roads and delaying the start of its convention, The Associated Press reported. The event marked the beginning of campaign season ahead of Germany’s elections next month.
Planned protests organized by an alliance of activists have begun ahead of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) two-day party conference, which kicks off Saturday morning in the eastern German town of Riesa in Saxony.
Germany's far right AfD party in Saxony-Anhalt has submitted a motion slamming the Bauhaus movement, just as the hallowed school of architecture and design nears its centenary milestone.
A fire department in the German state of Lower Saxony intervened when a duck's feathers froze to the surface of a pond near a sewage treatment plant. The crew successfully freed the bird from its predicament, a fire department spokesman in the city of ...
Some refugees may return to Syria because they want to live there again. But many won’t—for the same reasons many refugees from Nazi-occupied Europe didn’t after World War II.
This headdress is just one of numerous artifacts discovered in 1934 in the lavish grave of a woman who lived during the European Mesolithic period (15000 to 5000 B.C.). The unique array of grave goods and the malformations of the woman's skeleton suggest that she may have held a special social role, such as a shaman.