A Danish police officer said the force was investigating reports of damage at a Jewish cemetery in the center of the country and considering a possible antisemitic motive.
Damage was discovered at the small Jewish cemetery in Randers on Nov. 9, the anniversary of the Nazi Kristallnacht pogroms in Germany in 1938, the DR broadcaster reported on Monday. The report did not say when the damage was caused.
No graffiti or political slogans were found on site, but several headstones were toppled and some damaged, the report said.
Five years ago, two men with ties to a neo-Nazi group were convicted of extensive vandalism at the same cemetery.
“We are at a point in the investigation where we do not rule anything out,” Police Inspector Anders Uhrskov from East Jutland Police told DR . Wh

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