German nazis on trial for plotting state overthrow

Eight young men stand trial in Dresden this week, accused of belonging to a banned neo-nazi group calling itself the “Saxon Separatists” and of planning an armed overthrow of the German state. The Saxon Separatists emerged in 2020 in Brandis, a small town near Leipzig in the eastern state of Saxony. According to federal prosecutors,…

Saxon separatists arrest
A suspect in the Saxon separatists case being arrested in November 2024

Eight young men stand trial in Dresden this week, accused of belonging to a banned neo-nazi group calling itself the “Saxon Separatists” and of planning an armed overthrow of the German state.

The Saxon Separatists emerged in 2020 in Brandis, a small town near Leipzig in the eastern state of Saxony. According to federal prosecutors, the group was built around a belief in an imminent collapse of society, often described in far-right circles as “Day X”.

Paramilitary training

They believed that such a crisis would allow them to seize territory in eastern Germany and establish an independent national socialist state. Their choice of initials, “SS”, was not accidental.

Those now on trial are mostly in their early twenties. Prosecutors say they underwent paramilitary training, practicing house-to-house combat, night marches and patrols.

Weapons and combat gear

They are alleged to have acquired weapons and combat equipment, including protective vests, helmets and camouflage clothing.

05 November 2024, Saxony, Dresden: Police officers stand in a building entrance in the Cotta district of Dresden during a raid against suspected right-wing extremists. The federal prosecutor's office has arrested eight suspected right-wing terrorists in Saxony and Poland. At the same time, around 20 properties are being searched, according to the Karlsruhe authorities. Searches are also being carried out in Austria. Photo: Sebastian Kahnert/dpa 
Dostawca: PAP/DPA.
Police raid a house in the Cotta district of Dresden during arrests of Saxon Separatists (Photo:Sebastian Kahnert / dpa)

The group was preparing not only for armed confrontation with the state but also for violent action against political opponents and minorities, including plans for ethnic cleansing once their imagined separatist territory was secured.

Wider network

Their arrests, in November 2024, followed a coordinated operation involving German authorities and security services in Austria and Poland, indicating that the group’s connections extended beyond Germany’s borders.

Although the core members are now in custody, investigators believe there may be a wider network of sympathisers and supporters still at large.

The trial itself, expected to last well into 2026, cannot be separated from the wider context of far-right radicalisation in eastern Germany.

Several of the defendants were formerly associated with the Alternative for Germany party, which has enjoyed strong electoral support in Saxony.

While the party leadership has sought to distance itself from such extremists, Germany’s domestic intelligence service has placed parts of the AfD under surveillance as suspected neo-nazi organisations.


Professor Colin Holmes

Professor Colin Holmes
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