German disputes circumnavigate the term of transsexual outpatient extremists

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A dispute has erupted in Germany as to whether the trans-defined extremist should serve a prison in prison in a female or male facility.

In July 2023, Marla-Svenzha Libic was sentenced by the Halle District Court in Saxon-Anhalt to a total of one year and six months in prison without a conditional release for the end right to incitement to hatred, slander and insult.

Libich appealed his sentence and lost.

At the time she was known as Sven Libic. German media reports say Libic was a member of a neo -Nazi group called Blood and Honor.

At the end of 2024, Libic entered his gender in official records, changed from male to female. She also changed her name.

The basis for this was the law of self-determination of Germany, which just came into force and strengthened the rights of transgender people. The law allows people to change their sexual marker and name through a simple declaration in the register register instead of a judgment.

The German media questioned whether the change of Libic was serious.

“Whether the change is serious is dubious,” Der Spiegel writes. “Libic has been known for years for her right -wing extremist views and has also made Queerphobic statements in the past.”

Libic has taken court action against the media about what she considers to be false ideas of her sexual identity.

A complaint against Spiegel to the Press Council was unanimously rejected by the Council as unfounded. Spiegel said the letter said that Libich was likely to “make a change in civil violence status to provoke and disturb the state.”

Libic wants to start the prison period soon.

The Chief Prosecutor in Halle, Dennis Blackness told the German public presenter MDR in Saxony-Anhalt that Libic would serve his sentence in a chemistry prison prison.

Libic confirmed this in an X. publication I will start my sentence in prison on a schedule, “she said. “On August 29, 2025, at 10:00 pm, I will arrive at the Chemnitz correctional facility with my suitcases.”

Then it will be decided where to place Libich at the beginning of imprisonment. The Attorney General said the prison administration would decide whether Libic could pose a threat to security and the order, which could lead to a transfer to another prison.

Meanwhile, the German media reported that Libic had recently lost another case against journalist Julian Reichelt in the Berlin Regional Court.

RayHelt, editor -in -chief of NIUS, published on X in July: “Anyone who follows the reporting of neo -Nazi Sven Libic can only come to one conclusion: the government of the traffic coalition manages to law for almost the entire German landscape to say to the rabies and make a grotesque

Die Welt said the court’s second civilian chamber decided to reject Liebich’s request for a preliminary order, saying it was unfounded.

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