Voters who supported the far-right Alternative for
Germany (AfD) in elections in two eastern states have knowingly
helped to put "right-wing extremists" in power, the chairman of the
Central Council of Muslims in Germany said.
"We must not pretend to ourselves that these voters are casting
protest votes or are simply naive," Aiman Mazyek, the chairman of the
council, told Tuesday's Neue Osnabruecker Zeitung newspaper.
"I believe they know that they are assisting right-wing extremists to
gain seats in the parliaments," Mazyek said.
He described positions taken up by the AfD in Saxony, where the AfD
almost trebled its support to 27.5 per cent, as anti-constitutional.
"It is not the Muslims in Germany, but the AfD that has to commit to
democracy," Mazyek said.
Attempts by the AfD to classify Islam as an ideology rather than a
religion were against the German constitution. "This is not only an
anti-religion, but an anti-constitution position," Mazyek said.
The AfD, which also saw its support in neighbouring Brandenburg rise
in the elections held on Sunday, takes a strongly anti-immigrant and
anti-Muslim line.
The German immigration authority, BAMF, put the number of Muslims in
Germany at the end of 2015 at between 4.4 and 4.7 million in a total
population at the time of 82.2 million.
Aiman Mazyek described positions taken up by the AfD in Saxony, where the AfD almost trebled its support to 27.5 per cent, as anti-constitutional.