Berlin, Jan 4, (dpa?GNA) – The authorities in Germany’s south-western state of Baden-Württemberg, are warning coronavirus protesters against going out onto the streets unless their rallies are authorized, after over 50,000 people on Monday demonstrated their opposition to anti-coronavirus restrictions.
The state’s Interior Minister, Thomas Strobl, on Tuesday updated an estimate of how many people were at the demonstrations, after authorities released a far lower figure the previous evening.
There were some 170 protests across the state, watched by over 2,500 police officers, Strobl told public broadcaster ARD.
“The demonstrations are now a very, very large phenomenon,” Strobl said. Those caught violating rules on large gatherings would face fines, he said.
“The rule of law still applies … Anyone who organizes something like this, makes themselves open to punishment,” he said.
Extremists were being carefully watched, he said.
Tens of thousands of people in other states on Monday evening, also took part in demonstrations against coronavirus measures and government plans for compulsory vaccinations.
In Mecklenburg-Vorpommern in the north-east, a focal point of the demonstrations in recent weeks, police said about 12,000 people took part in protests.
The state of Thuringia saw about 17,000 people on the streets, police said. About 10,000 protested in Bavaria, and some 2,500 people gathered in the city of Magdeburg in Saxony-Anhalt. Violence broke out at times both in Magdeburg and in protests in the eastern state of Saxony.
GNA