Skip next section Victims demand more than sympathy 25 years after NSU’s first murder

09/09/2025September 9, 2025Victims demand more than sympathy 25 years after NSU’s first murder

The Turkish-born florist Enver Simsek was waiting for customers at his roadside stall near the southern German city of Nuremberg when his murderers ambushed him in the early afternoon of September 9, 2000.

Nine more people, nearly all of Turkish or Greek origin, would be murdered, and it would take over a decade for authorities to uncover the trio of killers in the far-right extremist National Socialist Underground (NSU). 

Questions remain regarding how a right-wing extremist terror group could execute people with non-German origins for years without the police and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution noticing a pattern.

Read more about the National Socialist Underground and how German authorities let down victims. 

https://p.dw.com/p/50Bf5

Skip next section Far-left 30-year-old faces up to 9 years for attacking neo-Nazis

09/09/2025September 9, 2025Far-left 30-year-old faces up to 9 years for attacking neo-Nazis

A group of people walking in a protest hold a sign that reads "Free Hanna, Antifa is necessary"Demonstrators have called for Hanna S.’s release Image: David Oßwald/News5/dpa/picture alliance

Federal prosecutors requested a nine-year sentence for 30-year-old Hanna S. for attacking a group of neo-Nazis in Budapest in February 2023 in their closing argument on Monday.

The alleged left-wing extremist is on trial in Munich for attempted murder, grievous bodily harm, and membership in a criminal organization. Prosecutors said she is a member of a group with “militant left-wing extremist ideology” that rejects the rule of law and that she engaged in what it called “violence tourism.”

The defendant is alleged to have been part of a group that attacked and beat people they saw as neo-Nazis during what members of right-wing groups called a “Day of Honor” in Budapest. Right-wing extremist groups from across Europe gather in Hungary on the day to commemorate an attempt by Nazi soldiers and Hungarian collaborators to break a Red Army siege on the city, according to the Federal Prosecutor’s Office.

At the beginning of the trial, defense attorney Yunus Ziyal called the event in Budapest a “neo-Nazi show” and claimed prosecutors did not have clear evidence for the charges brought against S.

S. and other group members are alleged to have participated in two attacks on a total of three people.

S. has been in custody since her arrest in Nuremberg in May. Six other people face charges of participating in the attack and were arrested after having surrendered to authorities in January and March. According to their defense attorneys, they did so in part to stand trial in Germany rather than be extradited to Hungary, where they could face excessive prison sentences and potentially unfair trials.

S.’s trial started in February, and a verdict is due later this month.

Editor’s note: DW follows the German press code, which stresses the importance of protecting the privacy of suspected criminals or victims and obliges us to refrain from revealing full names in such cases.

https://p.dw.com/p/50BgT

Skip next section Welcome to our coverage

09/09/2025September 9, 2025Welcome to our coverage

Guten Tag from DW’s newsroom in Bonn and welcome to our Germany coverage.

A 30-year-old woman could face nine years in prison if convicted of attempted murder for attacking five people participating in a meeting of European far-right groups. 

Automobile innovations with a focus on electric cars go on display in Munich at the IAA Mobility international motor show. 

Stay with us for news and updates from Germany.

https://p.dw.com/p/50Bex