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Editor-in-chief | Andreas Karsten |
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Categories | News magazine |
Frequency | Monthly |
First issue | 1 January 2010; 15 years ago (2010-01-01) |
Country | Germany |
Based in | Selent |
Language | German |
Website | Zuerst |
ISSN | 1869-5493 |
OCLC | 690427829 |
Zuerst! (German:First!) is a monthly Germannews magazine published inSelent, Germany. The magazine has afar-right-wing political stance.
Zuerst! was founded in January 2010 as a successor to the now-defunctNation und Europa magazine.[1] It was supported by right-wing publishers in Germany.[2] The publisher of the magazine was Lesen und Schenken.[3][4] At that time the distributor of the magazine wasBauer media group which also owned it later.[4][5] In September 2012, the group soldZuerst! due to criticism byDer Spiegel.[5][6]
Editors of the magazine also write for other right-wing publications.[2] The formereditors-in-chief ofZuerst! are Günther Deschner[2] and Manuel Ochsenreiter.[7][8] Andreas Karsten was named as the editor-in-chief in December 2021.[9][10]
The monthly, which provides news on theeconomy,current affairs, travel andculture, is also distributed in Austria, Luxembourg, Switzerland andSouth Tyrol.[3][11]
Zuerst! reported its political leaning and policy as follows: "The German news magazine ZUERST! will serve German - not foreign - interests."[1] Immediately after its first issue theOffice for the Protection of the Constitution announced that the content of the magazine was against the "unending de-nazification efforts", advocating revisionist theories on national boundaries, and the terrorist activities of the "South Tirolean Freedom Fighters" in the 1960s.[1]
In 2019 the editor Manuel Ochsenreiter was accused of sponsoring a group of radical Poles who staged afalse flag arson attack of Hungarian culture center inUzhhorod in order to discredit the government of Ukraine. The Poles testified in court that Ochsenreiter, who had long lasting ties to Russian government and separatists in Ukraine, passed them money and instructed them as to the way of conducting the arson for it to have most media impact.[12] According to OCCRP investigation, Ochsenreiter received thousands of euros from Russia's International Agency for Current Policy for publishing pro-Russian articles. In 2019, when investigation into the false flag attack in Ukraine was initiated, Ochsenreiter fled to Moscow and lived there until he died in suspicious circumstances in August 2021.[13][14]