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German
police told to target Scientologists
Samuel Loewenberg in Berlin
Sunday October 1, 2006
The Observer
Germans are being warned of the 'danger' of Scientology
amid growing concerns over the numbers of after-school tutoring programmes
springing up across the country.
The
government has told internal security forces to step up their scrutiny of the
movement, claiming that the Scientologists, which they label a cult, are
seeking to take advantage of Germany's ailing education system as a means to
recruit children. It has prompted US embassy officials to lobby the German
government on the sect's behalf.
Police
and intelligence agencies have been closely following the activities of the
group. State security and educational officials have issued warnings to schools
and parents that seemingly innocuous tutoring programmes may be fronts to
recruit children and their families.
Scientology-affiliated
tutoring programmes have more than tripled in the past 12 months, and there are
now estimated to be at least 30 nationwide. 'We know that Scientology is trying
to approach students to gain followers,' said Bavarian Interior Minister
Gunther Beckstein, who said there were at least eight tutoring programmes
connected to Scientology in Bavaria.
Scientology has the legal right to operate as a
religion in Germany, though the government has refused it tax-exempt status. 'Scientology
is not a religion. It is a business and its aim is to gain power over
individuals and try to brainwash them,' Beckstein added. 'We see it as the duty
of the state to inform students and parents about the danger of these schools.'
Scientology
spokeswoman Sabine Weber said the group was a religious one being persecuted
and that fears about tutoring and brainwashing were 'pure invention'. She said
she was aware of only one case of a teacher using tutoring as a means to
conversion. 'This goes against Scientology doctrine,' she added.
The Church of Scientology, founded by science fiction
writer L. Ron Hubbard, has celebrity adherents including Tom Cruise, John
Travolta and Isaac Hayes. It has a reputation for being secretive, wealthy and
extremely aggressive in repelling critics. While it claims to have 10 million
members worldwide, independent experts estimate the number as closer to 100,000.
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