Refugee murder in German anti-Islam hotbed sparks tension
Dresden police are investigating the violent murder of an Eritrean refugee after initially denying that the injuries that led to his death were the result of an assault, the Guardian reports, according to Sputnik News.
According to the New York Times, the 20-year-old's body was discovered by residents of his apartment block with stab wounds to his chest and neck.
"Up to now there are no indications of foul play," German police initially declared on Tuesday. However, following social media activity criticizing the statement as well as inquiries from a local newspaper and members of Germany's Eritrean community, the police launched a murder investigation, according to The Guardian.
"Our determination is that we are dealing with a homicide here, but if the autopsy indicates that we are wrong, I would be glad too that we have to deal something other than a murder," police chief Dieter Kroll told Deutsche Welle.
According to the Guardian, local Germans' opinions of the murder were mixed, while some sympathized with the deceased, others expressed disdain for asylum-seekers living in Germany, believing them to be a drain on the country's resources.
Dresden, where the refugee was murdered, has become known as the center of the Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamization of the West (PEGIDA) movement which has gained notoriety in the media for conducting anti-Islamization rallies in Dresden every Monday. This week’s demonstration reportedly attracted 25,000 people.