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1992 Mölln arson attack

Neo-nazi terror attack on a Turkish family in Germany From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Mölln arson attack (German: Brandanschlag in Mölln) was the first fatal case of far-right extremists setting fire to migrants' homes in post-reunification Germany, and one of the earliest cases of right-wing terrorism in the country's post-unification history. On the night of 22 November 1992, two neo-Nazis set fire to the two houses of Turkish families in Mölln, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Three people were killed and nine injured.

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Background

The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, and the reunification of Germany, saw a sharp rise in violent attacks against Turkish-Germans. A series of arson attacks, bombings, and shootings have targeted the Turkish community in both public and private spaces, such as in their homes, cultural centres, and businesses. Consequently, many victims have been killed or severely injured by these attacks.

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Attack

On the night of 22 November 1992, Mölln, Schleswig-Holstein two right-wing extremists, 25-year-old Michael Peters and 19-year-old Lars Christiansen[a][1] firebombed two houses inhabited by the Turkish Arslan and Yılmaz families.[2][3][4]

Local neighbours witnessed people jumping out of windows as their homes were set ablaze. The Yılmaz family was the first to be evacuated, but the Arslans' staircase and halls were blocked by the fire. 7-year old Ibrahim Arslan was wrapped in damp towels by his grandfather as he was rushed to the outside.[5]

The town's fire department received an anonymous call shortly after midnight reporting that an apartment building in the city’s center, where several foreign families lived, was on fire. The caller ended his call with the words “Heil Hitler.”[6] While the response by police and firemen were as fast as possible, the damage had been done by the time they arrived.[7]

Two girls, 14-year-old Ayşe Yılmaz and 10-year-old Yeliz Arslan and their 51-year-old grandmother Bahide Arslan died in the flames. Nine others, including a 9-month-old baby were seriously injured.[8][9][10]

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Aftermath

To protest the attack, several thousand people marched quietly in Berlin and Hamburg. Mölln's mayor, Joachim Doerfler, headed a silent procession of several hundred residents.[6]

Peters and Christiansen were found guilty by German courts and sentenced to life imprisonment and nine years imprisonment under juvenile law respectively. Peters was released on parole after 15 years in 2007, around the anniversary of the murders. Since his release, Christiansen has denied the extent of his involvement.[11][12]

The murders scared the German public, especially the Turkish minority, of the possibility of future attacks.[13]

In 2025, a documentary based on letters of survivors of the attack titled The Moelln Letters directed by Martina Priessner was selected in the Panorama at the 75th Berlin International Film Festival and premiered in February.[14][15]

See also

Notes

  1. Their names were initially protected under German law but are no longer hidden.

References

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