Culture minister Weimer booed at Leipzig Book Fair opening

At the opening of the Leipzig Book Fair, Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer (independent) was interrupted by boos from the audience. The criticism targets his decision to exclude three leftist bookstores from the German Book Trade Prize due to constitution protection concerns. Several hundred people demonstrated against his cultural policy outside the Gewandhaus.

The opening ceremony of the Leipzig Book Fair turned into a tribunal for Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer. Parts of the audience repeatedly booed his speech after he removed three bookstores – Buchladen zur schwankenden Weltkugel in Berlin, The Golden Shop in Bremen, and Rote Straße in Göttingen – from the nomination list for the German Book Trade Prize. Reason: 'verfassungsschutzrelevante Erkenntnisse' regarding the leftist bookstores. Weimer stands by his decision: 'I have passionately fought for freedom of opinion as a journalist and publisher for half my life. [...] The category of freedom and the category of promotion are two entirely different things.' He stressed the state's duty of care in funding with tax money: 'My state should reject all extremists equally: right-wing, left-wing, Islamists.' Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) defended Weimer: The approach is 'in principle logically sound,' though he did not request the constitution protection review. The affected bookstores criticized: 'We applied for a prize, would have received it, were lied to and struck off retrospectively.' They plan to sue. The Börsenverein des Deutschen Buchhandels voiced criticism; chairman Sebastian Guggolz said: 'We will not be divided and played against each other through threatened use of constitution protection.' The prize honors owner-operated bookstores with up to 25,000 euros.

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Filmmakers rally in support of Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle against political interference, open letter and protest signs prominent.
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Filmmakers support Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle

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Hundreds of filmmakers have expressed support for Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle in an open letter, warning against political interference. Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer has called an extraordinary supervisory board meeting where Tuttle's future may be decided. The letter emphasizes the importance of artistic freedom amid debates on the Middle East conflict.

Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer, facing accusations of state control after constitutional protection checks on leftist bookstores, called for greater freedom of opinion at the Leipzig Book Fair. Critics accuse him of sidestepping the controversy that led to boos at the opening ceremony.

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Current and former jury members of the Stiftung Kunstfonds have spoken out against Culture Minister Wolfram Weimer's request for the names of jurors in all funding programs. They express outrage over political interference and cite a lack of trust. This comes amid previous incidents.

The Cologne Administrative Court has ruled in an expedited procedure that the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution may not classify the AfD as confirmed right-wing extremist for the time being. The decision is interim, and the main proceedings are still pending. Politicians from various parties are responding cautiously, while the AfD hails the ruling as a victory.

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In Wolgast, a 31-year-old man shouted right-wing extremist slogans and showed the Hitler salute. Witnesses reported this to police on Monday afternoon. Officers instructed the man on site and are now investigating him.

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