DRESDEN, Germany: A woman wearing a headscarf walks past the entrance to the Fatih Camii Mosque, where traces of smoke can be seen after a bomb attack. — AFP DRESDEN, Germany: A woman wearing a headscarf walks past the entrance to the Fatih Camii Mosque, where traces of smoke can be seen after a bomb attack. — AFP

DRESDEN: Bomb attacks hit a mosque and an international convention centre in the eastern German city of Dresden, police said yesterday, adding that they suspected a xenophobic and nationalist motive.

No one was injured in the blasts late Monday in a city that has become a hotspot for far-right protests and hate crimes following Germanyís huge migrant influx. ìAlthough no one has claimed the attack, we assume a xenophobic motive,î said Dresden police chief Horst Kretzschmar. ìWe also suspect a connection with celebrations next weekend for the Day of German Unityî on Monday, October 3. Dresden will host national celebrations Monday to mark 26 years since the reunification of East and West Germany, to be attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel and President Joachim Gauck. ìWe have now switched to crisis mode,î Kretzschmar said, with police deployed to guard the cityís two mosques and an Islamic cultural centre.

The first homemade bomb went off around 9:50 pm local time (1950 GMT) Monday and damaged the door of the mosque while the imam and his family were inside. The second blast about 25 minutes later happened at the main venue for next Mondayís festivities, the cityís international convention centre which also includes a hotel. It was partially evacuated.

Dresden, a Baroque city in Germanyís excommunist east, is also the birthplace of the anti-immigration PEGIDA street movement, short for Patriotic Europeans Against the Islamisation of the Occident. Its members have angrily protested against the influx of refugees and migrants that last year brought one million asylum seekers to Europeís biggest economy. About a dozen demonstrations are planned over the long weekend, by both PEGIDA and by antifascist groups.

Saxony state premier Stanislaw Tillich called the ìcowardlyî bombings an ìattack on freedom of religion and on the values of an enlightened societyî that could easily have claimed lives. German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere said the mosque attack was ìall the more scandalousî because it happened on the eve of the 10th annual meeting of the dialogue forum the German Islam Conference. Saxony state saw far-right hate crimes targeting shelters for asylum seekers rise to 106 in 2015, with another 50 recorded in the first half of this year. In an annual report outlining progress since reunification, the government warned last week that growing xenophobia and right-wing extremism could threaten peace in eastern Germany. — AFP