Unconstitutional symbols discovered at Seehäuser train station!

Transparenz: Redaktionell erstellt und geprüft.
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On December 19th and 20th, 2024 we will report on incidents in Stendal, including fire and burglary. Investigations are ongoing.

Am 19. und 20. Dezember 2024 berichten wir über Vorfälle in Stendal, darunter Brand und Einbruch. Ermittlungen laufen.
On December 19th and 20th, 2024 we will report on incidents in Stendal, including fire and burglary. Investigations are ongoing.

Unconstitutional symbols discovered at Seehäuser train station!

In Seehausen, a town in Saxony-Anhalt, unconstitutional symbols were recently discovered on a weather protection module at the train station. These were carried out by previously unknown perpetrators. The symbols were promptly removed and the police launched an investigation to find those responsible. This happened on December 19, 2024, as reported by the official statement from the Saxony-Anhalt police.

During the same period, there was a break-in at a single-family home on Beusterstrasse, where the burglars broke a window and caused damage in the mid-three-digit range. The acts are causing concern among local residents as the incident took place between the evening of December 18th and the morning of December 19th. In another incident, a Christmas arrangement on a wooden table in an apartment in Stendal was ignited, requiring the fire department to be called in. Fortunately, the fire was prevented from spreading, but the exact circumstances of the fire are still being investigated.

Protection for the “Long Stone”

The events in Seehausen stand in contrast to the significant progress in the area of ​​monument protection. The “Long Stone”, a unique menhir located in Seehausen, has now been replaced by a detailed copy after it was salvaged and thoroughly cleaned in 2017. This stone, which is seen as a representation of a human or a deity, is the only figuratively decorated menhir in Central Germany and gives the place historical splendor. The new copy was placed at the original location to preserve the significant cultural heritage. The redesign and protection of the “Long Stone” underscores the ongoing efforts to protect and preserve the region’s cultural relics Archeology Online reported.