29.09.2007 SOLIDARITY WITH ANTI-FASCISTS IN RUSSIA
We need your help
"International support is
vital and valued" explains St Petersburg anti-fascist activist Bruno
Garmson.
It is not easy being an anti-fascist in Russia at
the moment. We are under constant attack from racists and fascists
and we receive little or no protection from the authorities. Several
of our activists have been murdered in recent years and even when
the attackers are caught they often walk free with suspended
sentences.
The rapid decline of Russia`s fledgling democracy,
marked by gross violations of human rights during the government`s
Chechen campaigns, the granting by parliament of unprecedented
powers to the secret service, the abolition of elected executives
(governors, mayors etc), the introduction of censorship and
political show-trials and murders have changed the political
atmosphere. This has enabled nazis and their extreme-rightist allies
to stage campaigns as well as using nationalism as an alibi to
commit murders, many of which go unpunished.
Outside Russia,
this is not always easy to grasp.
In the heroic stories about
the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945 against the Nazis that flicker
almost nightly on Russian television screens, it is nowadays hard to
find any other motives described than "defending the
motherland".
Unfortunately, there are few eyewitnesses left
who can describe the genuine anti-fascist enthusiasm they felt for
the Republican cause in the Spanish Civil War or spell out the
common conviction, held during the Second World War, that the Nazis
intended to enslave and exterminate Russian citizens as subhumans
and explain how, therefore, the anti-fascist struggle was above all
a battle of humanity against fascist barbarism.
Today?s
Russian nazis use official nationalist myths about the war both as
proof of Russia`s superiority and as an example of how the Stalin
regime misled the whole Russian people, sacrificing millions of
soldiers and civilians against Hitler`s anti-Bolshevik crusade to
"liberate" the Russians. Ignorance about Soviet history, lack of a
proper analysis of the theory and practice of fascism and the
reduction of the term "anti-fascism" to mean simply a nationalistic
fight against the enemies of Russia make it difficult to oppose such
obvious lies.
Real anti-fascism, challenging nationalism and
facing down nazism, is a risky course of action. Such "dissident"
behaviour is viewed as "suspicious opposition" to the policies of
President Vladimir Putin and the state. Any person displaying such
behaviour is regarded as an "extremist", like the nazis. Openly
opposing fascism means being targeted by the violent gangs of nazis
who patrol the streets of Russia`s cities looking for victims to
attack in broad daylight.
Young anti-fascists have started to
fight back. The courageous stance of young Russian anti-fascists
against the growing street violence by nazi gangs is often the
subject of court proceedings, which have proved inconsistent. The
outcome of trials of nazi killers tends to depend on what charges
are brought by the public prosecutors: almost always hooliganism
(violently disrupting public order) or being involved in
hooliganism.
There is no real pressure from the Kremlin or
Duma (parliament) on public prosecutors to use hate crime charges
and there is a widespread practice of negotiation between judges,
prosecutors and defence lawyers to achieve cooperation in trials.
Finally and crucially, there is a lack of pressure from
anti-fascists who, because there is no deeply rooted democratic
culture, rarely get involved with investigations or court
proceedings.
Here in St Petersburg, anti-fascists have
actively helped the public prosecutors as expert witnesses since the
early 1990s and have run some successful campaigns. The nazis
reacted by murdering Nikolai Girenko in 2004, then the most visible
anti-fascist specialist supporting the public prosecutors in cases
against fascists.
Now a younger generation of anti-fascists
is emerging to oppose the nazis in the courts and on the streets.
Their battles are essential the alternative is capitulation
but expensive. It costs a great deal of money to participate
in court proceedings even when the lawyers act pro bono. In the case
against the murderers of Timur Kacharava, anti-fascist funding
enabled his family and friends to help put away his
killers.
In Russia, there are no big trade unions, labour
movements or long-standing anti-racist structures with democratic
anti-fascist traditions that we can turn to for help. As a result,
we depend on ourselves and the anti-fascist movement
internationally.
Support from our brothers, sisters, comrades
and friends abroad is ever more vital and valued.
SOLIDARITY
WITH ANTI-FASCISTS IN RUSSIA
ANTI-FASCISTS are under attack
in Russia. Intimidation, terror and murder by a new generation of
neo-nazis are daily occurrences. The wave of violence reached a peak
this summer when film of the cold-blooded fascist assassination of
two people was posted on the internet.
That this is occurring
in a country that lost many millions of people to Hitler`s Nazis in
the Second World War is even more shocking.
* 122 people have
been murdered by racists and fascists in the past two and a half
years. * There are an estimated 70,000 skinheads in Russia
today. * Anti-fascists are being systematically attacked and even
murdered. * The perpetrators are often charged only with
"hooliganism".
President Putin has promised to stamp out
rightwing extremism but has done little. Anti-fascists are not only
few in number but are politically isolated in the face of an enemy
that whips up hatred and brutality against immigrants and national,
ethnic, religious and sexual minorities. Merely "looking
anti-fascist" means being targeted by the nazis who patrol parts of
most Russian cities looking for victims. In St Petersburg and
Moscow, nazis gather intelligence to track down anti-fascists, and
attack and, in some cases murder them.
Earlier anti-fascist
campaigns against the public use of fascist symbols and the sale of
racist propaganda achieved some success but the nazis reacted by
murdering Professor Nikolai Girenko, one of the most highprofile
anti-fascist specialists who had supported these campaigns, at his
St Petersburg home.
The authorities talk proudly of the war
against Hitler but do so now from a nationalist standpoint. The
nazis claim to be defending "Russian identity" and "the interests of
the Russian nation" and the toleration of violent nazi gangs stems
from the fact that Russian nationalism is touted, even officially,
as a remedy for the continuing feelings of defeat resulting from the
collapse of the Soviet Union.
Anti-fascists in Russia now
desperately need financial and material assistance but cannot
generate this themselves. With funds, they can produce leaflets,
organise campaigns and pay for lawyers. They can also build up a
more organised, modern, computer-linked infrastructure to create
proper networks of resistance.
This can only come about
through the international solidarity of progressive people, and all
anti-fascists and anti-racists outside Russia.
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