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  • Kondopoga Scenario

    KONDOPOGA SCENARIO
    by Kira Latukhina

    RusData Dialine - Russian Press Digest
    September 18, 2006 Monday

    New cases of ethnic conflicts registered in the Volga Federal District

    Stoking fears of escalating xenophobia, a man died in a brawl
    involving ethnic Armenians in the Saratov region last week and three
    people were hospitalized after an attack on an anti-migration rally
    in St. Petersburg on Sunday. State Duma deputies sounded the alarm
    about a surge in violence. But they also approved legislation that
    would increase penalties for those who employ illegal migrants -
    a populist vote, critics said, that tapped into widespread xenophobia.

    The country is on edge after clashes and riots targeting Chechens in
    the Karelian town of Kondopoga killed two people earlier this month.

    Local residents clashed with four ethnic Armenians in a cafe in the
    town of Volsk on Sept. 10, Saratov regional police said Friday. Three
    ethnic Russians suffered knife wounds, and one later died in the
    hospital. Police and the local Armenian diaspora downplayed suggestions
    that the fight was racially motivated. But Ekho Moskvy radio reported
    the fight was followed the next day by an attack on ethnic Armenians
    at a Volsk technical college that injured one student. Police denied
    the report and said two ethnic Armenians involved in the cafe fight
    had been placed on a national wanted list.

    On Sunday, masked people attacked a rally by the radical Movement
    Against Illegal Immigration in St. Petersburg, sparking a fight
    that led to three people being hospitalized. About 30 activists were
    attending the rally to demand the expulsion of Caucasus natives from
    Kondopoga, where people raided and destroyed small businesses run by
    Caucasus natives after two locals were stabbed to death in a fight
    with Chechen migrants. St. Petersburg police said 21 attackers,
    who identified themselves as members of an anti-Nazi movement,
    were detained.

    One of the victims was stabbed with a knife, while the other two
    suffered head injuries. It was unclear whether the victims were
    protesters or attackers. The Movement Against Illegal Immigration also
    organized a rally Thursday in Moscow to protest Caucasus natives in
    Russian universities. Police tried to prevent the rally by detaining
    about 200 young men near the Dobryninskaya metro station.

    Also Thursday, several dozen young men, some of them described by
    witnesses as skinheads, participated in a fight inside the Oktyabrskaya
    metro station. No one was detained.
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