‘Gender-change’ neo-nazi fugitive arrested in Czech Republic

Marla-Svenja Liebich, the German neo-Nazi whose cynical exploitation of Germany’s gender recognition law Searchlight reported on in January, has been apprehended after eight months on the run. Czech police arrested Liebich in the town of Luby, close to the German border, on the basis of a European arrest warrant, a spokesman for prosecutors in the…

Sven Liebich
Sven Liebich

Marla-Svenja Liebich, the German neo-Nazi whose cynical exploitation of Germany’s gender recognition law Searchlight reported on in January, has been apprehended after eight months on the run.

Czech police arrested Liebich in the town of Luby, close to the German border, on the basis of a European arrest warrant, a spokesman for prosecutors in the eastern German city of Halle confirmed. He briefly attempted to evade arrest but is now in custody, with extradition proceedings under way.

Blood & Honour

As Searchlight reported in January, Liebich’s background lies deep in the post-reunification neo-Nazi subculture of eastern Germany. Now 55, he first came to prominence in the 1990s as part of Blood & Honour’s eastern German chapter.

Blood & Honour, the international the transnational neo-Nazi network originally founded in the UK in 1987 by Ian Stuart Donaldson, frontman of the white power band Skrewdriver, was banned in Germany in 2000 for promoting racist violence and supporting underground terror cells.

Sven Liebich
Sven Liebich

Although the organisation was outlawed, Liebich and many of its other members continued to operate through successor organisations, merchandise stalls, and public demonstrations.

Over the years Liebich built a reputation as a serial agitator: staging confrontational street actions, harassing political opponents, and selling far-right propaganda material. His criminal record includes repeated convictions for incitement, insult, and hate-motivated offences.

Political stunt

The conviction at the centre of the current case, for which he was sentenced to 18 months in 2023, arose from offences including incitement to hatred and selling baseball bats engraved with the phrase “deportation helpers”.

After losing every appeal, Liebich turned to Germany’s Self-Determination Act, registering as female in early 2025 in a move widely interpreted as a political stunt designed to mock the legislation and force the authorities into the awkward position of placing a convicted neo-Nazi in a women’s prison.

Sven Liebich - greetings from Moscow
Sven Liebich – greetings from Moscow

When his final appeal was dismissed and a prison date set, Liebich failed to report to Chemnitz women’s prison on 29 August, instead posting “Love from Moscow” on X alongside an AI-generated image appearing to show the Russian capital.

In the event, he was arrested in the Czech republic, with his head shaved and wearing mens’ clothing.

Cynical gambit

As we reported in January, Liebich had also claimed to have converted to Judaism and demanded kosher meals in prison, a claim Germany’s antisemitism commissioner condemned as a deliberate mockery of Jewish religious practice. Liebich had previously disrupted a pride event in Halle while describing LGBT participants as parasites, making the gender-change gambit all the more transparently cynical.

Liebich will in all likelihood be extradited quickly and required to serve the sentence in a women’s facility, though the question of prison placement may yet generate further legal argument.

Just four weeks ago, the Halle district court which sentenced him indicated it was examining whether the changes to Liebich’s registered name and gender could be reversed.


Nick Davies

Nick Davies

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Peter Hain, founder of the ANL and friend of Searchlight

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Professor Colin Holmes
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Professor Colin Holmes
University of Sheffield

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