Migrant shelter burns in eastern Germany, arson suspected

Published February 22nd, 2016 - 12:00 GMT
People demonstrate on February 21, 2016 in solidarity with refugees in front of a former hotel being converted into a home for asylum seekers and partly destroyed by a fire in Bautzen, eastern Germany. (AFP/Christian Essler)
People demonstrate on February 21, 2016 in solidarity with refugees in front of a former hotel being converted into a home for asylum seekers and partly destroyed by a fire in Bautzen, eastern Germany. (AFP/Christian Essler)

Crowds of onlookers cheered as the roof of a hotel being converted into a migrant shelter in went up in flames early Sunday.

Police are treating the fire in eastern Saxony as an arson. No one was injured in the blaze, but the Guardian quoted police as saying a crowd of locals that had gathered at the scene "reacted to the arson with derogatory comments and undisguised joy," and some reportedly tried to prevent firefighters from dousing the flames.

The German state of Saxony is reportedly home to an anti-Islam, anti-immigration group known as Pegida.

The incident comes three days after about 100 anti-refugee protesters in Clausnitz, also in Saxony, blocked the arrival of a bus of migrants on the way to the town's shelter - which is reportedly directed by a member of the anti-immigrant Alternativ fuer Deutschland party.

While Germany has been lauded for opening its borders to refugees from Middle East conflict zones, the country has also experienced a surge in attacks against refugee camps - 924 in 2015, up from 199 the year prior, according to federal statistics.

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