Showing newest posts with label Russia. Show older posts
Showing newest posts with label Russia. Show older posts

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Anti-fascist Activist Killed in Moscow

Anti-fascist Activist Killed in Moscow
October 15th, 2008

A young activist involved with a Russian anti-fascist movement has been killed in the country’s capital, the Interfax news agency reports (RUS). 26-year-old Fedor Filatov died in an area hospital on October 10th from multiple knife wounds sustained early that morning.

A representative of the Antifa movement said Filatov, known in the movement as “Nok,” was jumped by a group of assailants near him home as he went to work. “According to our information, four to eight people armed with knives were waiting for him in his courtyard,” he said.

The source said that a Russian neo-nazi group had already claimed responsibility for the murder on an internet forum as recently as October 12th. While a murder investigation has been launched, law enforcement officials had yet to verify that information.

The Antifa source said the movement considers Filatov’s murder a “planned action” by extremists. “There is not a shadow of a doubt that he died for his beliefs,” the group’s members wrote in a statement.

Russia has seen a growing presense of neo-nazi and extreme nationalist organizations in recent years, and attacks on immigrants and non-ethnically Russian people have become more common. Immigrant community leaders have meanwhile accused authorities and law enforcement of being too lenient in pursuing ethnically motivated crimes.

Groups like Antifa have stepped in to try to counter the growing influence of neo-nazis and denounce their racist and violent activities. Filatov himself helped to found the Moscow Trojan Skinheads, a group described as “a community of anti-political, anti-racist skinheads from Moscow and the Moscow Oblast.”

Filatov was not the first anti-fascist activist to be attacked and killed in recent years.

In November 2005, vocal activist and musician Timur Kacharava, 20, died from knife wounds in St. Petersburg. In April 2006, 19-year-old Alexander Ryukhin was killed by six neo-nazis outside a punk-rock concert. In January 2007, Ivan Yelin was stabbed 20 times by unidentified attackers on the outskirts of St. Petersburg. In March of this year, 16-year-old Alexei Krylov died in Moscow after a group of 15 neo-nazis armed with knives attacked 7 young people near the Kitai Gorod metro station.

Each young man had taken part in the Russian anti-fascist movement.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

[For Dion] Immigrant fears as number of neo-Nazi murders soars [Russia]

Note that in 2005, local fascists and a sprinkling of boneheads attempted to hold their annual gathering -- the Sydney Forum, co-hosted by Dr James Saleam of the Australia First Party (NSW) and Welf Herfurth of the Sydney-based fascist groupuscule 'New Right' -- at the Russian Club. Upon being publicly revealed as hosts for the racists, the Russian Club pulled the plug, and the event was held at Saleam's bunker in Tempe instead. In 2006, the Estonian Club bravely stepped into the breach, with minimal or no apparent opposition from members of the local Estonian community, who are apparently happy to have their Club associated with the promotion of racism and fascism. Last year (2007), it was the RSL's turn, the venue for the Sydney Forum, in addition to the bunker, being Eastwood; the Bexley RSL hosted the Forum in 2004. As for 2008, who knows?

Locally, bonehead venue The Birmingham Hotel (Fitzroy/Collingwood, Melbourne), despite quite vocal support from local fashion punks, has recently undergone a change of management to a new, less fascist-friendly team.

Immigrant fears as number of neo-Nazi murders soars
"Concern over authorities’ lack of action as boneheads ‘hunt down’ non-Russians"
Sunday Herald
John Follett in Moscow

RUSSIA'S BONEHEADS [not 'skinheads'] have begun to hunt and kill immigrants "like game" in the most serious surge in neo-Nazi violence since the fall of the Soviet Union.



Human rights groups say nationalist extremists murdered 41 people in the first three months of this year, more than four times as many as the same period last year. Some groups put the death toll even higher, at 53.

The number and severity of attacks seems to indicate that radical nationalists have become more organised and more willing to kill and maim, usually with a knife.

Victims are stabbed not once but sometimes 20 or 30 times in frenzied attacks accompanied by racial abuse. Those that survive are often scarred for life; in one recent case an immigrant had his nose and lips sliced off. Some of the victims have been women and children.

The attackers are driven by a hatred of non-Russians, who they believe are diluting the gene pool and irrevocably changing the fabric of their country.

"Russia for Russians" is their main slogan. Far-right websites warn that their followers are poised to crank up the severity of the attacks still further, turning to bombs and guns. The victims are mostly people from former Soviet republics in Central Asia, who come to Moscow and St Petersburg to work in construction or do other manual work that Russians don't want to do.

Though the migrant workers fill a gap in the job market, opinion polls show that many ordinary Russians are uncomfortable with their presence and would like to see immigration controls severely tightened. City officials in Moscow, where most of the killings take place, say there are around 850,000 migrants from Central Asia living in a city that has a total population of 10 million.

Their Asian features make them easy targets for boneheads scanning the streets for people of non-Slavic appearance. The killings have sparked a wave of diplomatic protests from the victims' home countries and stirred talk of a street war between boneheads and revenge-minded migrant workers.

Raimkul Attakurov, ambassador for Kyrgyzstan in Russia, complained in a letter sent to Russia's human rights ombudsman earlier this year about what he called "the savage attacks of fascist monsters".

Police have responded by clamping down [sic] on bonehead activity, especially in Moscow. But rights groups accuse them of a cover-up when it comes to discussing the problem publicly or providing meaningful crime statistics. Police prefer to classify many of the attacks as mere "hooliganism".

[In reality, Russian police are far more likely to repress anti-fascists than they are the murderous gangs of boneheads who regularly assault and kill, not only 'foreigners', but anti-fascists. A recent, unauthorised protest (March 19) by anti-fascists in Moscow was conducted in memory of murdered Russian punk, 20-year-old Aleksey Krylov (March 16, 2008); Aleksey was on his way to a gig by the band Nichego Horoshego. Unusually, none of the several hundred-strong crowd were arrested.]

Moscow prosecutor Yuri Semin said last week that he thought the media had "exaggerated" the upsurge in killings and questioned the reliability of statistics released by human rights groups. The police itself keeps no detailed records but insists the number of race hate crimes is falling.

"If someone kills a Kyrgyz, it's inevitably assumed it's on ethnic grounds," said prosecutor Semin. "For some reason, it's assumed that people can't kill Kyrgyz people for other reasons."

Semyon Charny, an expert at the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights, believes the authorities find the problem inconvenient. "The authorities in Moscow are interested in creating a good image for the city," he said. "(But) in recent times the number of extremist crimes is on the increase. It is, as one magazine put it, like a safari."

Police also cite the large number of crimes committed by immigrants whenever the problem is raised, hinting that they are facing a backlash of their own making. Embassies are advising migrant workers to avoid going out on their own, to always be smartly dressed, and to drink alcohol in private rather than in the street.

Galina Kozhevnikova of rights group Sova believes official rhetoric, which has become increasingly strident and nationalistic in tone, is partly to blame. Politicians from outgoing president Vladimir Putin to Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov have made comments that appear to favour ethnic Russians over immigrants, while laws have been introduced to limit the number of non-Russians working in the retail sector.

Police made a string of high-profile arrests in the last year that appeared to have decapitated the underground neo-Nazi movement. But Kozhevnikova said the arrests have, paradoxically, only encouraged others who seek the same notoriety and infamy in far-right circles.

It has, she said, become "fashionable" to be a bonehead and "cool" to kill an immigrant.

Sociologists say Russia is home to about 70,000 skinheads and that they tend to congregate in large urban centres such as Moscow and St Petersburg, which has also seen a large number of murders of non-Russians. About 30,000-35,000 of them have neo-Nazi beliefs.

Yevgeny Proshechkin, chairman of Moscow's anti-fascist centre, urges the authorities to wake up to what he calls "acts of terrorism".

"Things need to be called by their name," he told the liberal newspaper Novaya Gazeta. "We are standing on a dangerous threshold."



See also : Aryan Guard rocks complacency, Jamie Komarnicki, with a file from Tony Seskus, Calgary Herald, April 20, 2008: "Disaffected youth seeking shock value, or something far more sinister?" | Neo-Nazis Clash With Protesters, Pamela Constable, Washington Post, April 20, 2008: "3 Arrested as White Supremacist Group Marches on Capitol" and as 30 losers from the NSM traipsed about Washington. "Members of the public were kept far from the marchers, who wound up on the West Lawn of the Capitol, where they waved flags and made speeches to an empty, sloping expanse of green, surrounded by hundreds of riot police." Oddly, despite being exposed as an FBI informant, Hal Turner was there too.

PS. Happy Birthday Adolf!