Friedhelm Busse (4 February 1929 – 23 July 2008) was a leading German national socialist. The son of an SA Sturmbannführer, Busse was born in Bochum and served in the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend in 1945. After the war he became active in Reichsjugend, the youth wing of the Socialist Reich Party and later the Deutsche Reichspartei.
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- Friedhelm Busse (4 February 1929 – 23 July 2008) was a leading German national socialist. The son of an SA Sturmbannführer, Busse was born in Bochum and served in the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend in 1945. After the war he became active in Reichsjugend, the youth wing of the Socialist Reich Party and later the Deutsche Reichspartei. During the early 1960s he took an active role in terrorism in the majority-German speaking Italian province of Bolzano-Bozen, and was arrested in 1963 for possession of dynamite. Busse joined the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) in 1964 and soon became one of the party's leading members in North Rhine-Westphalia. As a member of the NPD Busse became associated with student radicalism, much to the displeasure of the NPD leadership. To this end he set up a radical far right group, Aktion Widerstand, in 1970 and was expelled from the party the following year as the leadership sought to reassert itself. In June 1971 he joined with other radicals in setting up the Partei der Arbeit/Deutsche Sozialisten, which re-emerged in 1975 as Volkssozialistische Bewegung Deutschlands (VSBD). During this time he was also involved in organising neo-Nazi cadres and played a leading role in the establishment of the NSDAP/AO. Alongside this he continued to play a leading role in the VSBD until it was outlawed in 1982 following a shooting incident. Busse then became associated with the Free German Workers' Party (FAP), becoming leader of the party in 1989 when Michael Kühnen was forced from that position due to his homosexuality. The FAP declined as successor groups loyal to Kühnen emerged but Busse remained influential as an individual and was present at Rostock in 1992 when neo-Nazis launched an arson attack on an immigrants hostel. With the FAP on the wane he became involved with organising Freien Kameradschaften but was caught by police in Stuttgart in 1994 and placed on 20 months probation for attempting to reorganise the banned Action Front of National Socialists/National Activists. He continued his involvement with the Kameradschaften however, running an information service for them from 1997. He was also active in organising lectures and rallies for the neo-Nazi cause. Largely retired from activism due to his age, he designated Norman Bordin as his successor in 2004. He died on 23 July 2008 in Passau. German officials dug up his grave to remove a Reichskriegsflagge that had been placed on his casket at the time of burial.
- Friedhelm Busse zählte zu den führenden Köpfen der militanten Neonaziszene in Deutschland. In den 1970er-Jahren prägte er die Entwicklung der militanten extremen Rechten entscheidend mit. Bis zu ihrem Verbot war er Vorsitzender der rechtsextremen FAP.
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- Friedhelm Busse (4 February 1929 – 23 July 2008) was a leading German national socialist. The son of an SA Sturmbannführer, Busse was born in Bochum and served in the 12th SS Panzer Division Hitlerjugend in 1945. After the war he became active in Reichsjugend, the youth wing of the Socialist Reich Party and later the Deutsche Reichspartei.
- Friedhelm Busse zählte zu den führenden Köpfen der militanten Neonaziszene in Deutschland. In den 1970er-Jahren prägte er die Entwicklung der militanten extremen Rechten entscheidend mit. Bis zu ihrem Verbot war er Vorsitzender der rechtsextremen FAP.
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- Friedhelm Busse
- Friedhelm Busse
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