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		</div><p>Police in Berlin have given far-right extremists permission to hold a rally commemorating the death of Adolf Hitler&#8217;s deputy Rudolf Hess in the city&#8217;s western district of Spandau. They have told organisers they can march, but they are not allowed to glorify Hess, who died at Spandau prison 30 years ago.</p>
<p>The neo-Nazis are allowed to take banners, but only one for every 50 participants, and military music is strictly forbidden, unless a court overturns that rule before Saturday&#8217;s march. Such restrictions are common in Germany and rooted in the experience of the pre-war Weimar Republic, when opposing political groups would try to forcibly interrupt their rivals&#8217; rallies, resulting in frequent bloody street violence, said Sven Richwin, a Berlin lawyer.</p>
<p>The exact rules differ according to the circumstances, but police in Germany generally try to balance protesters&#8217; rights to free speech and free assembly against the rights of counter-demonstrators and residents, he said.</p>
<p>&#8220;Anything intimidating is &#8216;verboten&#8217;,&#8221; Mr Richwin told the Associated Press on Friday.<br />
The rules mean that shields, helmets and batons carried by far-right and neo-Nazi protesters in Charlottesville last weekend would not be allowed in Germany.</p>
<p>Openly anti-Semitic chants would prompt German police to intervene, although efforts would be made to detain specific individuals rather than to stop an entire rally, said Mr Richwin. Left-wing groups expect about 1,000 people to attend counter-protests on Saturday in Spandau.</p>
<p>Hess, who received a life sentence at the Nuremberg trials for his role in planning the Second World War, died on August 17 1987. Allied authorities ruled his death a suicide, but Nazi sympathisers have long claimed that he was killed and organise annual marches in his honour.</p>
<p>The marches used to take place in the Bavarian town of Wunsiedel, where Hess was buried until authorities removed his remains.</p>
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