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TOL: The Cruelest Month

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  • TOL: The Cruelest Month

    THE CRUELEST MONTH
    by Nickolai Butkevich

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    May 4 2006

    April saw a rash of particularly ugly attacks against minorities,
    as fascism finds fertile soil in Russia.

    On 20 April, neo-Nazis around the world celebrated the 117th
    anniversary of Adolf Hitler's birth. Nowhere was the date marked
    with more violence than in Russia, a country that, paradoxically,
    lost tens of millions of its citizens in the struggle against Nazism
    six decades ago.

    When it comes to racist violence, April 2006 will go on record as
    the bloodiest month in recent Russian history, with at least seven
    murders and more than a dozen assaults blamed on neo-Nazi groups.

    Since the late 1990s, Russia's homegrown fascists have spent the
    days surrounding 20 April stepping up their year-round campaign of
    violence against dark-skinned ethnic minorities, foreign students
    (predominantly from developing countries), and Jews. This disgusting
    annual spectacle is presumably deeply embarrassing to President
    Vladimir Putin, who has publicly condemned racism and anti-Semitism.

    Yet despite the mobilization of thousands of extra police officers
    in Moscow and other cities every April, Russian authorities seem
    helpless to stem the tide of violence.

    Nowhere is the situation worse than in Russia's beautiful "northern
    capital," St. Petersburg. On 7 April, skinheads in that city shot dead
    an African student. Lamzar Samba, a 28-year-old Senegalese national,
    became the ninth African killed there over the past year, according to
    a local African student group. Police discovered a swastika engraved
    on a shotgun near the scene and briefly arrested a suspect before
    releasing him.

    Several racist assaults also occurred in St. Petersburg last month
    - a Chinese student was attacked outside her apartment, a Ghanaian
    man was savagely beaten in the city's suburbs, a mob of soccer fans
    assaulted two Mongolian students on a metro train, and an Indian
    medical student was stabbed.

    Local neo-Nazi web sites brazenly called for more violence against
    non-Russians to mark Hitler's birthday and even posted a how-to manual
    with advice on how to evade arrest afterward.

    Unfortunately, St. Petersburg is not the only Russian city where
    violent racists are running amok. On 8 April, a Moscow paper reported
    that skinheads beat two Tajik men on a suburban Moscow train before
    throwing them off, killing one of their victims. No arrests were
    reported in connection with that murder. Even ethnic Russian youths
    are not safe in Moscow if they belong to an anti-fascist youth group.

    On 16 April, skinheads stabbed to death an anti-fascist punk rock
    fan in what his friends termed a coordinated attack. One suspect has
    been detained.

    On 13 April, a group of young men armed with iron bars and wooden
    clubs attacked a Romani camp in Volzhsky, killing two and seriously
    injuring an 80-year-old woman and a 14-year-old girl. Police detained
    nine teenage suspects, some of whom admitted that their attack was
    motivated by ethnic hatred. Other racist murders committed during
    the month include the killing of a 50-year-old Vietnamese man in
    Ostrogozhsk, in the Voronezh region; the stabbing death of a Tajik
    man in Moscow (his friend was seriously injured); and the murder of
    an Armenian student by skinheads on the Moscow metro.

    Other non-fatal attacks were reported last month in Ryazan (where
    four youths were charged with a hate crime after beating up an Indian
    student); Chita (where a dozen youths shouting racist slogans attacked
    a group of Chinese construction workers, leading to six arrests on
    charges of "minor hooliganism"); Nizhny Novgorod (where a Malaysian
    student was hospitalized after an assailant hit him on the head and
    fled and two Syrian students were beaten up in a nightclub); and Surgut
    (where, in separate incidents, a group of skinheads attacked an ethnic
    Kazakh youth and an ethnic Lezgin, leading to hate-crimes charges).

    The leader of the Jewish community of Izhevsk narrowly avoided a
    similar fate on the second evening of Passover, when he and another
    member of the community ducked into a hotel lobby to avoid a mob
    of youths parading down the street shouting "Sieg Heil!" and other
    anti-Semitic slurs. A similar incident took place in Rybinsk, in
    Yaroslavl region.

    HALF MEASURES

    While racist violence has become a daily feature of Russian life,
    it should be noted that there have been some improvements in the
    way the government deals with hate crimes. Starting in 2002, the
    number of arrests of skinheads increased. To their credit, police
    this year prevented similar crimes by quickly rounding up skinheads
    in Bryansk and Novosibirsk before they could strike. Unfortunately,
    police chiefs in St. Petersburg and Voronezh - the cities with the
    worst reputation for racist violence in the country - minimized the
    extent of the problem by blaming a supposed media conspiracy against
    local officials. The Voronezh chief of police even went so far as to
    state that the number of murders in his region (four in recent years)
    was "not that many."

    Given the multiethnic nature of the country, xenophobic violence has
    clear implications for future political and economic stability if it is
    allowed to spin out of control. In combination with a greater emphasis
    on promoting tolerance among the nation's youth, federal and regional
    authorities must systematically crack down on skinhead gangs, and the
    media need to have regular access to hate-crimes trials in order to
    discourage judges from giving neo-Nazi thugs lighter sentences than
    ordinary criminals.

    Most importantly, Kremlin political advisers should never again
    create and support openly racist parties like Motherland, which was
    put together before the last parliamentary elections in order to
    drain votes away from the nationalist opposition. Only then will it
    be possible to imagine a time when 20 April returns to being just
    another ordinary spring day in Russia.

    Nickolai Butkevich is research and advocacy director for the Union
    of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union.
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