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Germany's far-right AfD party has suspended a longtime spokesman after he repeatedly described himself as a fascist and praised his "Aryan grandfather", reports said Sunday. According to Die Zeit newspaper, Christian Lueth was relieved of his duties at the request of senior party figure Alexander Gauland following an internal review. Lueth had allegedly "repeatedly described himself as a fascist and referred to his grandfather's Aryan lineage", the paper wrote in its online edition, citing party sources. Lueth's grandfather was a submarine commander during World War II and received an Iron Cross from Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, the newspaper said. "Yes, he has been suspended," AfD co-leader Tino Chrupalla told Der Spiegel weekly, declining to comment on the reason. Although Zeit initially reported that Lueth had been dismissed, Spiegel said he had yet to be officially sacked. "But it doesn't look good", it added. Lueth, 43, has been with the party since its early days as an anti-euro outfit in 2013 and cultivated close ties to top party figures like Gauland. Lueth started out as a press spokesman for the AfD before becoming the spokesman of its parliamentary group when the party entered the national Bundestag in 2017. Citing AfD sources, Spiegel said Lueth apparently made the controversial comments in an online chat with a woman who is not an AfD member. A screenshot of the conversation had been circulating for some time, according to Spiegel. The AfD did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The anti-Islam AfD has frequently come under fire for expressing anti-foreigner sentiment and railing against Germany's culture of remembrance for Nazi crimes. The party's parliamentary leader Gauland once dismissed the Nazi dictatorship as a "speck of bird shit" in German history. Following news of Lueth's ousting, some commentators pointed out that a German court last year ruled that another senior party figure, Bjoern Hoecke, could justifiably be called a fascist -- yet remains the AfD's leader in the eastern state of Thuringia. "Why would the media think he was fired because of 'allegations of fascism'?" tweeted Ruprecht Polenz, a former secretary general of Chancellor Angela Merkel's centre-right CDU party. "Wouldn't the AfD then also have to kick out somebody else?" The AfD's popularity surged after it capitalised on widespread anger over an influx of asylum- seekers in 2015. But support for the party has waned in recent months after it was blamed for fuelling a spate of far-right attacks. The AfD has also been less visible lately, as the coronavirus pandemic puts the spotlight on Germany's ruling parties. mfp/har
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