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  • Kondopoga For Moscow

    KONDOPOGA FOR MOSCOW
    Viktor Tkachev; Maksim Rudometkin

    RusData Dialine - Russian Press Digest
    Noviye Izvestia, No 108, p.1
    June 25, 2007 Monday

    Nationalists clashed with people from the Caucasus in downtown Moscow

    Dozens of ultranationalists armed with metal poles and broken bottles
    attacked people from the Caucasus and Central Asia at two squares near
    the Kremlin and a third location Friday night, raising fears of an
    escalation in ethnic violence. One ethnic Armenian was hospitalized
    with stab wounds and 42 people were detained in the clashes, city
    police said.

    The attackers consisted of about 50 members of ultranationalist groups,
    including the Movement Against Illegal Immigration, which sought to
    carry out a "provocation against the population of Moscow," police
    said in a statement. Alexander Belov, the movement's leader, called the
    accusation "some kind of stupidity" Sunday and said he had given police
    his own version of events when summoned to a police station Saturday.

    Arrests were made on Manezh Square and Slavyanskaya Ploshchad,
    both near the Kremlin, and outside the Fili metro station in western
    Moscow. Police arrested a Russian citizen identified as I. Sergeyev,
    born in 1988, on suspicion of assaulting a D. Aganesyan, born in
    1990. The police statement gave no other names or details about the
    detainees. It was unclear Sunday whether they remained in custody
    and whether they would face charges.

    Police said both ultranationalists and immigrants had broken the law
    on Friday night. They also appealed to leaders of political parties
    and movements not to "provoke their supporters nor entice youths and
    minors into committing illegal acts, particularly for ethnic reasons."

    The Movement Against Illegal Immigration posted footage of the clashes
    on its web site. Young men carrying broken bottles and metal poles were
    seen clashing on what the web site said was Slavyanskaya Ploshchad.

    In other footage, people chanted "Russia for Russians!" and
    "Kondopoga!" in reference to ethnic violence in the northwestern town
    late last summer that followed the killing of two local residents
    during a brawl with Chechens in a restaurant. Locals took to the
    streets, burning down the restaurant and targeting other establishments
    owned by people from the Caucasus.

    Kondopoga has become something of a cause celebre both for
    ultranationalists, who claim it serves as a warning to those who
    tolerate the integration of different ethnicities, and for human rights
    groups, which call the incident a prime example of the propagation
    of racism.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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