German police have launched an investigation against three 14-year-olds for inciting hatred after the teenagers allegedly played anti-Semitic songs.
They did this after visiting the Buchenwald concentration camp.
Because of that incident, they could be kicked out of school, and an investigation was launched after their school in Grunberg in western Germany reported them to the police, Deutsche Welle's Tanjug reports.
The incident occurred on October 15, when three teenagers from the Koh school allegedly played anti-Semitic songs on a smartphone and sang on the school bus, after touring a former Nazi camp.
As stated, for the time being, it is being considered what measures will be taken against them, and the worst could be expulsion from the school.
By the way, the Teo Koh school they attend won several awards for their work against racism, and the ninth grade students of that school worked for four months on a project dealing with Nazism.
The Buchenwald camp, located in central Germany, was used by the Nazis as a labor camp from 1937 to 1945, and 56.000 people died there, including 11.000 Jews and 8.000 Soviet prisoners of war.
Today, that camp has been turned into a memorial center that serves as a reminder of Nazi crimes.
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