First Sexual Assault Charge Filed over Cologne New Year's Violence
German authorities have brought the first sexual assault charge stemming from New Year's Eve mob violence in the western city of Cologne against an Algerian man, prosecutors said Thursday.
The 26-year-old suspect is believed to have groped a woman while he and around 10 other men surrounded her at the city's main train station, a spokesman for the Cologne administrative court told AFP.
"The first sexual assault charge has now been filed," the spokesman said, nearly three months after the events that inflamed public debate about a huge influx of refugees and migrants to Germany.
The Algerian national, who was not named, is also accused of stealing the victim's mobile phone from her handbag.
The suspect's 23-year-old brother is accused of stealing another woman's phone while he and other men surrounded her, but a sexual assault was not reported.
It was not immediately clear when the cases would go to trial, the spokesman added.
Prosecutors received more than 1,100 criminal complaints over incidents on New Year's Eve in Germany's fourth biggest city, including over 480 accusations of sexual assault, news agency DPA reported.
Most of the 120 suspects are from Algeria or Morocco, including recent arrivals and men who have been in Germany for years.
Only three people have been convicted in the ensuing months, for theft, and the city's police chief conceded in February that most perpetrators may never be caught.
The attacks fanned tensions in Germany, which took in nearly 1.1 million asylum seekers in 2015, mainly from Syria, Afghanistan and Iraq, and put intense pressure on Chancellor Angela Merkel for her welcoming stance toward refugees fleeing war.
Far-right groups railed against "sex jihadists" and "rapefugees" in street rallies and the events were seen as pivotal in delivering strong results to a populist anti-migrant party, the AfD, in three state elections this month.