Perilous Times
Report: 100 Russian skinheads attack concertgoers
By DAVID NOWAK
The Associated Press
Sunday, August 29, 2010; 4:04 PM
MOSCOW -- Scores of bare-chested skinheads attacked a crowd of about
3,000 people at a rock concert in central Russia on Sunday, beating
them with clubs, media reports said.
Dozens of people were left bloodied and dazed in the attack, television
and news agencies reported, and state news channel Rossiya-24 said a
14-year-old girl was killed at the concert in Miass, 900 miles (1,400
kilometers) east of Moscow.
Fourteen ambulances were called to the scene, the channel said, citing
witness accounts. The motive for the attack was not known, and
authorities couldn't be reached for comment. The ITAR-Tass agency said
local police had refused comment.
Many of Russia's top rock acts were attending the "Tornado" rock
festival, the agency said.
Russia has an ingrained neo-Nazi skinhead movement. Attacks on
dark-skinned foreigners in Moscow and St. Petersburg have been
relatively common in recent years. The January 2009 murder of lawyer
Stanislav Markelov and journalist Anastasiya Baburova prompted a
Kremlin crackdown on ultranationalists, who were blamed for the
killings.
In April, a Moscow court banned the far-right Slavic Union, whose
Russian acronym SS intentionally mimicked that used by the Nazis'
infamous paramilitary. The group was declared extremist and shut down.
Then the group's leader, Dmitry Demushkin, told The Associated Press it
tried to promote its far-right agenda legally and warned that the ban
would enrage and embolden Russia's most radical ultranationalists.
Russia's ultranationalist movement is so deeply embedded in the
country's culture that militant groups have sprouted up around Russia
to fight it. Anti-racist groups regularly spearhead attacks on
ultranationalists, sparking revenge assaults in an intensifying clash
of ideologies.
Neo-Nazi and other ultranationalist groups mushroomed in Russia after
the 1991 Soviet collapse. The influx of immigrant workers and two wars
with Chechen separatists triggered xenophobia and a surge in hate
crimes.
Racially motivated attacks, often targeting people from Caucasus and
Central Asia, peaked in 2008, when 110 were killed and 487 wounded, an
independent watchdog, Sova, said. The Moscow Bureau for Human Rights
estimated that some 70,000 neo-Nazis were active in Russia - compared
with a just few thousand in the early 1990s.