German transgender far-right extremist arrested in Czech Republic

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German media reports say Marla-Svenja Liebich used to be a member of a neo-Nazi group called Blood and Honour.

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Liebich was arrested on the basis of a European arrest warrant in Krásná in the east of the country, some 100km (62 miles) east of the capital, Prague.

In August 2025, Marla-Svenja Liebich, formerly known as Sven, failed to appear at the prison in the German town of Chemnitz, where she was to serve an 18-month jail term.

German media reports say Liebich used to be a member of a neo-Nazi group called Blood and Honour.

In July 2023, Liebich was sentenced by the Halle District Court in Saxon-Anhalt to a total of one year and six months in prison without parole for extreme right incitement to hatred, defamation, and insult.

A spokesperson for the Halle public prosecutor's office told the BBC that Liebich was now in custody in the Czech Republic.

At the end of 2024, Liebich had her gender entry in official records changed from male to female. She also changed her first name.

The basis for this was Germany's Self-Determination Act, which had just come into force and strengthened the rights of transgender people. The Act allows people to change their gender marker and first name through a simple declaration at a registry office, instead of a judicial ruling.

German media have questioned whether Liebich's transition was serious.

Last year, the Federal Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt (CSU) accused Marla-Svenja Liebich of abusing the Self-Determination Act. "The gender change appears to be a clear case of abuse here," Dobrindt told ZDF TV.

According to reports in the "Mitteldeutsche Zeitung", Liebich was wearing men's clothing and had a shaved head, at the time of the arrest.

It is understood Liebich briefly tried to evade capture.

The spokesperson for the Halle public prosecutor's office has not commented on Liebich's appearance.

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Source: BBC

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