The German foreign minister on Sunday called on the country’s “silent majority” to “get up off the sofa" and take a stand against the far-Right in the wake of neo-Nazi riots.

“The vast majority of Germans are cosmopolitan and tolerant,” Heiko Maas told Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

“If decent people remain silent, the racists are much louder. We have to show the world that we democrats are the majority and the racists are a minority. The silent majority must finally get louder.”

Mr Maas’ comments come after violent protests over the fatal stabbing of a man by migrants in the east German city of Chemnitz last week that saw neo-Nazis openly making Hitler salutes and hunting foreigners through the streets.

Police officers at a Right-wing rally in Chemnitz - Picture-Alliance / Barcroft Media

“When it comes to xenophobia, the far-Right and racism, Germany is quite rightly viewed through especially critical eyes,” the foreign minister said.

“If the Hitler salute is displayed on our streets today it is shameful for our country. Politicians must do our part, but it is a challenge for the whole of society: we have to take a stand against the far-Right.”

Mr Maas said Germans had to speak up for basic rights.

“My generation has been given freedom, the rule of law and democracy. We didn’t have to fight for it, and sometimes we take it for granted,” he said.

“We have to get up off the sofa and open our mouths.”

Chemnitz has seen several days of protests following the death of a German-Cuban man in a suspected stabbing by two migrants from Iraq and Syria.

Fresh protests passed off largely peacefully on Saturday amid a heavy police presence.

Eighteen people suffered injuries in scuffles, but none were seriously hurt.

An Afghan man was attacked and beaten in another part of the city, away from the main protests, but also escaped serious injury.

There were fears of clashes as far-Right and far-Left protesters held rival demonstrations in the city.

But police numbers have been massively increased with reinforcements from around the country following Monday’s riots, and they were able to keep control.

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More than 11,000 people took part in the rival rallies, according to police. Protestors poured into Chemnitz from across Germany and trains to the city were completely full.

People gather during demonstrations following the killing of a German man in Chemnitz Credit: REUTERS/Hannibal Hanschke

The nationalist Alternative for Germany party (AfD), which has seen its support rise in the opinion polls since the protests began, held a silent march through the city led by Björn Höcke, one of its most controversial politcians, who has previously called for a “180-degree turn” in German attitudes to the Second World War.

The AfD march joined with a separate demonstration by the anti-Muslim Pegida movement.

Meanwhile left-wing “Antifa” protestors held a rival rally across the city, and water cannons and riot police were deployed to keep them apart.

At one point far-Left protestors were reported to be arming themselves with stones. Sören Bartol, an MP from the centre-Left Social Democrats (SPD), tweeted that he and a group of peaceful protestors had been attacked by neo-Nazis and had to be escorted back to their bus by police.

Several German journalists reported they had been threatened by protesters while trying to cover the rallies.

MDR television said one of its crews was attacked after being invited into a flat to film the protests: one of the crew members was knocked down the stairs and their camera was broken.