Around 750 right-wing extremists in Germany have legally acquired guns, up from 400 in 2014, the "Welt am Sonntag" newspaper reported on Saturday.

The newspaper acquired the statistics after German lawmaker Martina Renner, member of the socialist Left party, submitted a request for information to the federal government. "Police and those responsible for the enforcement of gun laws must deal urgently with the 750 right-wing extremists who have obtained gun licenses," Renner said after the figures were released.

A participant in a neo-Nazi march in Lower Saxony in 2013

The spike in legal gun ownership among right-wing extremists coincides with an increase in the number of attacks involving guns on asylum-seekers and refugees, refugee shelters and volunteers, the lawmaker noted. In 2016 there were 79 such attacks - up from about 30 in 2015. The weapons used in the attacks include pistols, semi-automatic weapons and blank-firing guns.

Concern over migrant attacks

"The rapid rise of small arms licenses apparently corresponds with the acts of violence against migrants using blanks, etc.," Renner said.

In October 2016 a known member of the extremist "Reichsbürger" movement shot and killed a 32-year-old police officer in Bavaria. It was later revealed he had been a legal gun owner.

Though gun ownership isn't rare in Germany, owners are subject to strict laws and are rarely allowed to obtain permits for self-defense.