German intelligence voiced concern Tuesday over the growing number of ultra-conservative Islamic Salafists in the country, some of whom are swelling jihadist ranks abroad, while warning of an increasingly violent German extreme right.
"Salafism is a particularly rapidly growing and extremely worrying group within the extremist Islamist movement," Hans-Georg Maassen, head of domestic intelligence, told a news conference as he presented his agency's 2012 annual report.
Radical Islamists in Germany numbered 42,550 in 2012, according to surveillance services, and the number of Salafists, who espouse an austere form of Sunni Islam, within the movement grew to 4,500 from 3,800 in a year, he said.
Maassen added that while not all Salafists are jihadists, it was clear that those who departed Germany for Syria or Egypt were there for that purpose.
"One can say that Salafism is an essential step towards jihadism or for people ready to conduct terrorist attacks," Maassen said.
He also stressed that the number of extremist Islamists in Germany did not signify there were "42,500 potential terrorists" in the country.
Still, some 1,000 people including some Salafists are considered dangerous and 130 are seen as a particular threat and are monitored around-the-clock.
The intelligence report also showed that Egypt had replaced the Waziristan region of Pakistan as the main center for the training of jihadists.
Syria is also a favored destination. "We counted more than 60 people who left Germany to fight in Syria," Maassen said.
In March Germany banned three Islamist Salafist groups which officials said aimed to sweep aside democracy and set up a system based on Sharia Islamic law.
Turning to Germany's extreme right, racist attacks increased last year despite a slight fall in the number of supporters of the far-right movement, the domestic intelligence service report said.
"There is a slight decrease in the number of members of the extreme right movement but the number of people ready to use violence is very striking, at 43 percent," Friedrich told reporters.
Some 802 racially-motivated violent crimes were registered last year, in the first increase in four years.
About 22,150 people were considered as being part of the far-right movement in Germany in 2012, slightly down on the figure for the year before but a far cry from the 50,900 members of 2000.
But Maassen said about 10,000 members were considered to be inclined towards the use of violence.
And he underscored that the racially-motivated crimes blamed on the neo-Nazi trio, the National Socialist Underground, whose last living member Beate Zschaepe is currently on trial in Munich, "are rejected overall by the extreme right movement".
But he added: "There remains a small fringe within the extreme right which finds it good and which sees terrorism as a possible form of action."
Zschaepe denies the charge of complicity in the murders of eight ethnic Turks, a Greek immigrant and a German policewoman between 2000 and 2007 as a founding member of the NSU.
The random discovery of the NSU in late 2011 embarrassed authorities, exposing deep security flaws and raising uncomfortable questions about how the cell went undetected for 13 years in a country proud of owning up to its Nazi past.
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