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Germany to prosecute 'sharia police' street patrols

A group of eight men will face trial after a court said that their orange 'sharia police' vests violated a ban on wearing uniforms at public rallies
The small group of men sparked public anger when they launched street patrols in the small town of Wuppertal last September (AFP)

A group of Germans will face trial for forming "sharia police" street patrols that told people to stop drinking, gambling and listening to music, a court said Tuesday.

The ultra-conservative Muslim group around German Salafist convert Sven Lau - known among supporters as Abu Adam - sparked public anger with their vigilante patrols in 2014 in the western city of Wuppertal.

A city court last December said the group would not face charges - but a higher court has now overturned that decision, announcing that eight members of the group could face trial.

It sided with state prosecutors who had argued the group's orange vests with the words "sharia police" on them constituted a violation of a ban on uniforms at public rallies.

The state high court in Dusseldorf also found that the law - which is aimed against militant street movements such as the early Nazi party - could be applied in this case.

The vests had signified the group's "shared political view" that traditional Islamic law could be applied on German streets, the court found.

This implied a violation of the separation of church and state and also evoked the "militant and intimidating" religious police units that operate in some Islamic countries.

Lau, one of Germany's most prominent Islamist preachers, was arrested in December on charges of supporting a "terrorist group" fighting in Syria and has been remanded in custody since.

Lau is accused of supporting and recruiting fighters for the Syria-based Army of Emigrants and Supporters, which Germany lists as a terrorist organisation.

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