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Racial Loyalty News => General News => Europa News => Topic started by: Axelsson on Fri 20 Nov 2009

Title: Russia: Battle in the streets
Post by: Axelsson on Fri 20 Nov 2009
Antiracists and far-right youths battle in Moscow
By MANSUR MIROVALEV and STEVE GUTTERMAN (AP) – 1 day ago

MOSCOW — A simmering confrontation between far-right youths and ant-racist activists has erupted into Moscow's streets after the fatal shooting of an anti-racist activist known as the Bonebreaker.

The violence stems from deep animus between two aggressive camps with starkly different visions of Russia's future — neo-Nazi skinheads who rank in the tens of thousands and militant anti-racist groups that call themselves Antifa, short for anti-fascist.

Former punk rocker Ivan Khutorskoi, 26, provided security for meetings of antifascists. He also was known for organizing underground bare-knuckle boxing matches among them, and taking part in violent attacks on ultranationalists.

Khutorskoi was gunned down in his apartment building on the city's outskirts Monday night. A day later, dozens of masked men pelted the headquarters of the pro-Kremlin youth group Young Russia with stones, trash and steel rods, Young Russia's leader said.

Kremlin critics say Russia's leadership created Young Russia and similar youth organizations to keep its political opponents in check and provide support, and sometimes muscle, on the streets. Anti-racist groups claim they have close ties with the ultranationalists they call fascists or Nazis.

Nobody was hurt in the attack late Tuesday on the office of Young Russia. But its message, delivered first with projectiles and then over the Internet, seemed clear.

"If no one but us tries to stop Nazis and those who provide cover for them, we will act by all means necessary," blogger Anarcho Punk wrote Wednesday. Other anti-racist bloggers said the attack was retaliation for what they claimed were the group's links to Russian neo-Nazis. They "dedicated" the assault to their leader, Khutorskoi — an outsized figure and a role model among antifascists, who say he had survived three previous assassination attempts. He was shot twice in the back of the head near the door to his apartment on Moscow's eastern outskirts, police said.

Khutorskoi sometimes provided security at press conferences of Stanislav Markelov, a human rights lawyer hated by ultranationalists — but not at the one last January after which Markelov and a journalist were fatally shot on the street.

Antifa groups have been rapidly adding to their ranks in Russia in recent years, said Galina Kozhevnikova, the director of Sova, a respected independent hate-crime watchdog monitoring group. She said their ideology attracts leftist-minded youth and people concerned about persistent hate crimes and xenophobia in today's Russia.

"The army of ultranationalists is definitely bigger, as the movement is much older," Kozhevnikova said.

Pro-Kremlin youth groups like Young Russia are also a significant force. Experts believe their emergence was a Kremlin response to the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine, where youth groups played a key role in street protests that ushered a pro-Western presidential candidate to power.

Young Russia is known for street rallies and pranks against anti-Kremlin politicians. The group has also been involved in attacks on anti-government protesters and opposition youth activists.

Young Russia's leader, Maxim Mishchenko, said about 80 masked men attacked the office in central Moscow. A 22-year old attacker was seized by Young Russia activists and handed over to police, he said.

Anti-fascist bloggers claimed Mishchenko, a Russian parliament member with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's United Russia party, has close ties with Russky Obraz, a radical ultranationalist group that antiracists claim was behind Khutorskoi's killing.

Mishchenko denied the allegations, calling them "as absolute lie."

A spokesman for Russky Obraz, Yevgeny Valayev, told The Associated Press that the group had "no Kremlin-appointed supervisors" but had cooperated with Mishchenko on several initiatives, including an extreme nationalist march in Moscow early this month.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gkOJxZG3W0gM5xho9ICbGxQWh6mAD9C25K8G0 (http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5gkOJxZG3W0gM5xho9ICbGxQWh6mAD9C25K8G0)
Title: Re: Russia: Battle in the streets
Post by: PatTracy on Fri 20 Nov 2009
I've heard 70,000 skinheads in the Moscow area alone. Just think if a quarter of them were given religion. Inspiring!
Title: Re: Russia: Battle in the streets
Post by: Axelsson on Sat 21 Nov 2009
 They are jsut giving low numbers to try and make us scared and backout. easy way to win for them.
Title: Re: Russia: Battle in the streets
Post by: PatTracy on Sat 21 Nov 2009
So true. If there were only 200 or Creators total like the media says there are they would have crushed us a long time ago and no one would ever have known. Rev. Hale gave a rare estimate shortly before his abduction putting Creator membership at 30,000 worldwide. A good number but far short of the 10 million we need.
We had a good size group in Russia at one time but I have no idea how they're doing now.
Title: Re: Russia: Battle in the streets
Post by: Mikey on Sat 02 Jan 2010
Young Russia is a pro Putin movement and also pro military as every russian is supposed to serve in the military, but they have a problem with traitorous draft dodgers.Young Russia is a reaction to that. It started out as patriotic but seems to be complete nigger lovers now as last I heard they want a "russia for everyone" as opposed to a "russia for russians"
thats the way I understand it, from what I've heard about them, they are a mainstream movement with thousands of members.theirs also a lot of nationalists in russia who are racial and anti islam but they have nothing to do with Young Russia.