Group tries to storm Berlin parliament after massive Covid-19 protest



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Berlin police were guarding the Reichstag on Saturday night after a mob tried to storm the parliament building at the end of a day of protest against Covid-19 restrictions.

At around 8 p.m., a group of people broke through the protective barriers and raced up the main steps in front of the building. Police in riot gear stopped them just before they reached the glass entrance doors and pepper sprayed them.

“To push them back we had to use force,” police said in a statement, adding that the spontaneous demonstration before the building was dismantled around 9 at night.

It was the dramatic end to a long day in Berlin when an estimated 38,000 people staged a largely peaceful protest against the Covid-19 pandemic restrictions, dubbed a “crisis of convenience” by a nephew of John F. Kennedy.

Demonstrators march during a protest against coronavirus pandemic regulations in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin on Saturday.  Photograph: EPA

Demonstrators march during a protest against coronavirus pandemic regulations in front of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin on Saturday. Photograph: EPA

Hours after a court overturned the ban on the gathering, the march through the city center came to a halt shortly after it began as protesters refused to wear masks or distance themselves.

A separate meeting was held near the Victory Column in Tiergarten park. From a stage there, Robert F. Kennedy, a skeptic of America’s vaccines, praised the cheering crowd for rejecting what he called efforts to spread fear in the pandemic and impose a new surveillance state.

Half a century after his uncle visited Berlin, then a frontier of the cold war against totalitarianism, Kennedy delighted the crowd by repeating his uncle’s most famous catchphrase, but in a very different context.

“Today Berlin is once again a front against totalitarianism,” he said to great applause. “And so I am proud to say, ‘Ich bin ein Berliner.’

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