Berlin: Germany`s landmark murder and terrorism trial of the surviving member of a neo-Nazi cell was interrupted Monday after three public defence lawyers asked to be relieved of their duties.
The lawyers had repeatedly clashed with the woman in the dock, 40-year-old Beate Zschaepe, the surviving member of the alleged killer trio called the National Socialist Underground (NSU).
The NSU is blamed for the assassination-style gun murders of 10 people -- eight men with Turkish roots, a Greek migrant and a German policewoman -- between 2000 and 2007.
Zschaepe is accused of aiding the killings and other crimes, including a nail-bomb attack in a Cologne migrant neighbourhood which wounded at least 23, and 15 bank robberies to finance the NSU.
The NSU`s two male members, Uwe Mundlos and Uwe Boehnhardt, died in 2011 after a botched bank robbery, in an apparent murder-suicide while hiding in their getaway vehicle, a rented camper van.
Zschaepe has stayed silent since the start of her high-profile trial in May 2013, held under tight security in the southern city of Munich.
She had repeatedly clashed with her three court-appointed lawyers -- Wolfgang Heer, Wolfgang Stahl and Anja Sturm -- and tried to fire them a year ago, unsuccessfully.
On Monday, the three lawyers asked to stop representing her. The court adjourned its hearings to consider the request.
Recently the court had appointed a fourth lawyer, Mathias Grasel.
It was not immediately clear whether the court would grant the lawyers` request to quit, and whether this could force a mistrial.
Germany was shocked in 2011 to find that the bloody murder spree -- long blamed by police and media on migrant crime gangs -- was in fact committed by a far-right group with xenophobic motives.
The random discovery deeply embarrassed authorities, exposing security flaws and raising uncomfortable questions about how the cell went undetected for 13 years.