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'We Are Waging a Racial Holy War'

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  • 'We Are Waging a Racial Holy War'

    'We Are Waging a Racial Holy War'
    By Maria Danilova

    Moscow Times
    June 16 2004

    The Associated Press -- Semyon Tokmakov stretches out his hand and
    points to a thick scar he got from assaulting a black U.S. Marine six
    years ago. The attack cost him 1 1/2 years in jail, but Tokmakov says
    he has no regrets.

    "We are waging a racial holy war," said Tokmakov, 28, an informal
    leader among Moscow's skinheads, whose violence appears to be rising.

    Over the last several years, Russia has become a strikingly hostile
    place for all those with African, Asian or so-called Caucasian
    features -- the dark skin and dark hair typical for the peoples of
    the mountainous Caucasus region.

    The U.S. Marine was badly beaten in 1998 in a Moscow market, one of
    several foreigners targeted in recent years. The last few months
    have seen an especially shocking series of brutal racial attacks,
    such as the stabbing to death of a Guinea-Bissau student in Voronezh,
    the killing of an Afghan asylum seeker in Moscow, and the slaying of
    a 9-year-old Tajik girl in St. Petersburg.

    Ethnic minorities in Moscow complain that beatings and insults are
    almost a daily occurrence.

    "Racially motivated crimes are growing in number and brutality by the
    year," said Alexander Brod, head of the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights.

    According to a two-year study conducted by Brod's bureau and a few
    other groups, there are about 50,000 skinheads in Russia, with Moscow
    and St. Petersburg home to about 1,500 each. It said 20 to 30 people
    have died in such attacks annually in the past few years, and the
    number of such crimes is growing by 30 percent per year.

    "When you kill cockroaches, you don't feel sorry for them, do you?"
    Tokmakov said, when asked whether he felt sorry for the slain Tajik
    girl.

    The growing extremist sentiments are rooted in Russia's economic
    problems, including high unemployment in many regions, and the
    collapse of the Soviet Union, which sent hundreds of thousands of
    migrants from poorer former Soviet republics to Russia seeking jobs.

    "Why have they all come here?" Tokmakov said. "They bring nothing
    but drugs and AIDS. Every day they harass and steal our women."

    Political parties and politicians openly played the nationalist card
    in the December parliamentary vote, calling for the ouster of migrant
    workers and promoting Russia for Russians. Two such political groups,
    the Liberal Democratic Party and the Rodina bloc, enjoyed victory in
    the election.

    Tokmakov said he and his associates had been on the ballot of Rodina
    but their names were later crossed out. Party officials have denied
    that.

    "When there are such economic and other hardships, there are usually
    two ways of dealing with it -- the first is that of contemplating,
    the second is looking for an enemy and blaming him for your problems.
    Unfortunately Russia has chosen the second path," Brod said.

    Rafael Arkelov, a 47-year-old Armenian singer who has spent all his
    life living in Moscow and for whom Russian is his first language,
    has experienced it all.

    He was in a grocery store buying a chocolate bar and a bottle of
    champagne to visit his friends for a New Year's celebration when a
    man asked him for some change. After Arkelov refused to give him
    money, he saw the man approach two youths with shaved heads whom
    he identified as skinheads standing nearby and whispered something.
    Several minutes later, after Arkelov walked out of the store, he was
    jumped from behind.

    "They punched me in my eyes, my face, and all of a sudden I couldn't
    see anymore. Then I collapsed to the ground and they started beating
    me with their feet," Arkelov recalled. "If it weren't for a woman
    across the street who screamed 'What are you doing?', if it weren't
    for this scream of hers, I think they would have beaten me to death."

    Brod's study predicted that the number of skinheads could grow to
    80,000 to 100,000 within the next two years if authorities don't
    take measures to combat xenophobia. Interior Ministry officials have
    said they were closely watching 10,000 suspected members of extremist
    groups, but all too often racially motivated attacks are dismissed as
    hooliganism. "Racism isn't unique to Russia, I know it exists in Europe
    and America," Arkelov said. "But unlike Russia, in those countries
    it is prosecuted and the state pursues specific policies to combat it."
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