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Russian Medical School Imposes Curfew for Hitler's Birthday

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  • Russian Medical School Imposes Curfew for Hitler's Birthday

    Russian Medical School Imposes Curfew for Hitler's Birthday
    by Peter Finn; Washington Post Foreign Service

    The Washington Post
    April 21, 2007 Saturday
    Suburban Edition

    One of Russia's leading medical schools has advised its many foreign
    students to stay in their dormitories for three days, fearing they
    could be attacked by neo-Nazis and skinheads marking the anniversary
    of Adolf Hitler's birth, which fell on Friday.

    The warning issued by the almost 250-year-old IM Sechenov Moscow
    Medical Academy, which suspended classes for its 1,940 foreign
    students, was a reminder of the xenophobic and racist violence here
    targeting students and migrant workers.

    On Monday, a street cleaner from Tajikistan was stabbed 35 times
    outside an apartment building in eastern Moscow. Surveillance cameras
    on a nearby building captured two skinheads carrying out the murder,
    according to news reports here. Five suspects have been arrested. On
    the same day a 46-year-old Armenian businessman was stabbed 20 times
    and later died in hospital. Three men were later arrested.

    "It's no secret that some extremist young people, and not just in
    Russia, try to celebrate the 20th of April by attacking others," said
    Sergei Baranov, acting dean of the Sechenov Academy department that
    deals with foreign students. "For us, it's better to take preventative
    measures than deal with the consequences." The curfew ends Saturday.

    Students in a dormitory near the academy's main building took the
    measure in stride, saying they had stocked up on food and were using
    the three-day hiatus to study for final exams next month. Some said
    they welcomed the concern for their well-being. "Security is very
    high, and we have very good protection," said Pari Vallal, 22, an
    Indian student who is in his fourth year at the academy.

    Students interviewed at the school said they are constantly on alert,
    especially when traveling on the Moscow Metro, where a number of
    racist murders and attacks have occurred. "One person grabbed me in
    the Metro and was very threatening," said Ha Quy Duong, 27, a student
    from Vietnam. "I've been followed in this area, and you experience
    verbal abuse out on the street."

    Baranov said there have been no serious attacks on students attending
    the academy.
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