Germany Ends Decades of Scientology Surveillance
After thirty years of official monitoring, Germany has concluded its surveillance of the Church of Scientology without ever substantiating the threats used to justify the campaign. The move leaves Berlin isolated from a global democratic consensus that has long recognized the organization as a protected religious institution.

For nearly three decades, German authorities justified a systematic program of blacklisting and discrimination by framing the group as a national security concern. This approach stood in stark contrast to the international community. In 1993, the United States granted the organization full religious recognition following a comprehensive review. Similar rulings followed in Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom, where courts explicitly condemned discrimination against the faith as unjust. Belgian courts further dismantled state-led efforts in 2016, acquitting the organization and rejecting the underlying prejudice of the proceedings.
While other nations integrated the group into their frameworks of religious liberty, Germany entrenched a policy of exclusion. State-sanctioned "sect filters" permeated public and private sectors, resulting in lost employment and social stigma for adherents. By maintaining this stance, the German government prioritized a narrative of suspicion over the legal standards upheld elsewhere. The cessation of surveillance marks the end of a state-led effort that failed to produce evidence of wrongdoing, leaving behind a legacy of institutionalized hostility that challenges the country's commitment to its own democratic principles.
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