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Government Takes Over Xenophobic Hate Campaign From Extremist Groups

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  • Government Takes Over Xenophobic Hate Campaign From Extremist Groups

    GOVERNMENT TAKES OVER XENOPHOBIC HATE CAMPAIGN FROM EXTREMIST GROUPS
    By Yuri Zarakhovich

    Eurasia Daily Monitor
    Nov 14 2008
    DC

    A 2007 attack by Russian neo-Nazis is recorded on video (Der Spiegel)
    The November 5 election of Barack Obama marked an historical watershed
    to many in the United States and elsewhere in the world, culminating
    decades of civil rights efforts and the fight against racism and
    encouraging new hopes for the recovery of the American dream.

    A day earlier, on November 4, Russian neo-Nazi skinheads
    fatally stabbed an ethnic Uzbek in Moscow and badly
    knifed another in a racially motivated attack in Moscow
    (www.lyzakovpavel.livejournal.com/25214.htm l). Also
    on November 4 participants of the nationalist "Russian
    March" in downtown Moscow badly beat up a Turkmen diplomat
    (www.xeno.sova-center.ru/45A29F2/BF977AD) .

    Racially-motivated attacks are increasing with frightening speed and
    violence.. In 2007 Russian neo-Nazis and other nationalist groups
    killed 73 and beat up 580 people in attacks against non-Russian
    minorities.

    By November 5 of this year, 81 had been killed and 320 wounded in
    xenophobic attacks according to the SOVA Analytic Center, which
    monitors neo-Nazi and other nationalist crimes in Russia, reported.

    SOVA's deputy director Galina Kozhevnikova told the Eurasia Daily
    Monitor on November 12 that although the number of such attacks might
    have decreased, they have obviously become far more violent. SOVA
    estimated the number of attacks from January 1 through November 5 as
    "somewhere around 700." At the same time, Kozhevnikova believes that
    many more such attacks go unreported, while the attackers and the
    police seek to present the reported ones as mere hooliganism rather
    than racist assaults.

    Russian courts are reluctant to establish the true nature of such
    beatings and murders, citing the lack of professional expert
    witnesses. Indeed, just a handful of such experts exist in the
    country, and their work is extremely dangerous. Nikolai Girenko, the
    most skillful and principled of such experts, was shot dead through
    the door of his apartment in St. Petersburg on June 19, 2004, as he
    identified himself to the killers. Russian investigators believe that
    his murderers belonged to St. Petersburg's notorious neo-Nazi group led
    by Dmitry Borovikov (www.demos-center.ru/news/11722.html?mode-print).

    According to a poll taken by the VTSIOM sociological center on June
    1, 68 percent of Russians (75 percent in Moscow and St. Petersburg)
    view ethnic immigration into Russia as a negative phenomenon
    (www.wciom.ru/novosti/press-vypuski/pre ss-vypusk/single/10274.html).

    Novaya Gazeta, a Moscow-based liberal biweekly, wrote on March 3
    that 55 percent of Russians supported the nationalist "Russia for
    the Russians" slogan (www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2008/15/00.html).

    Mass clashes between ethnic Russians and ethnic minorities have, in
    fact, been common for some time. The following are just a few examples:

    --On April 21, 2001, some 200 Russian extremists staged a pogrom
    at the Moscow Yasenevo metro station and badly beat at least
    10 Azeris. In March 2005 some 200 Cossacks destroyed Armenian
    shops and cafes in the littoral Black Sea city of Novorossiysk
    (www.newsru.com/crime/25may2007/draka _2.html#1).

    --From August 3 through September 3, 2006, there were mass clashes
    between ethnic Russians and Chechens in the northern Russian town of
    Kondopoga (www.newsru.com/russia/03sep2006/omon.html).

    --A bomb set off by a Russian nationalist at Moscow's Cherkizovo
    market on August 21, 2006, killed 12 and wounded more than 40
    (www.lenta.ru/news/2006/09/22/change/).

    --Some 300 Russians and people from the Caucasus clashed on May 24,
    2007, in the Southern Russian city of Stavropol. At least one person
    was killed in the clash, and the police had to use arms to disperse
    the crowds (www.newsru.com/crime/25may2007/draka_2.html).

    -- On June 8, 2008, four Russian nationalist groups, including
    the most notorious Movement against Illegal Immigration (DPNI)
    united into a single movement to fight ethnic minorities
    (www.regions.ru/news/fed_center/2147778 /).

    --On November 10, 2008, up to 70 Russians and immigrants from the
    Caucasus clashed violently in the Moscow suburb of Solnechnogorsk. Both
    sides used firearms, knives, and iron clubs, leaving seven people
    badly wounded. In September a similar melee with Uzbek immigrants
    had left two dead (www.forum.msk.ru/material/news/576882.html).

    Ost ensibly, the state has finally started paying attention
    to the nationalist menace. On November 10 Vladimir Markin
    of the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor' General's
    Office stated, "Growth of extremist crimes remains stable"
    (www.gazeta.ru/comments/2008/11/10_e_ 2878759.shtml). Galina
    Kozhevnikova, however, sees here a certain rivalry on the part of
    the state, which is now eagerly trying to assume nationalist slogans
    for its own use. Kozhevnikova points out that on November 4 the Young
    Guards Youth Movement (MGER) of the ruling United Russia party led by
    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin signed a cooperation agreement with the
    Mestnye (Locals), another pro-Kremlin group, "on actions and other
    measures to oppose illegal immigration." MGER and Mestnye are taking
    an active part in the anti-immigrant campaign now unfolding in Russia
    (www.xeno.sova-center.ru/45A29F2/BFABAD3).

    As the economic crisis hits Russia ever harder, xenophobia and hate
    crimes are certain to be on the rise, she believes, and will be used
    by the government to help keep control and divert potential social
    unrest onto immigrants and other ethnic minorities.
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