P*****l 发帖数: 438 | 1 从莫斯科,圣彼得堡,到俄国中部到西伯利亚,都有骚动,都有人被抓。
好险又被美联骗,这个鸭胡评论提醒了我
“lol the russians are called racist and hooligans, and the muslims are just
called a minority.
they are both racist, infact the muslims more so.”
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101215/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_ethnic_tensions
又想起无鲁穆其汉人被美联称为“暴徒”的事了。
1,000 detained in Russia to prevent ethnic clashes
MOSCOW – Fearing more clashes between racist hooligans and mostly Muslim
ethnic minorities, police detained more than 1,000 people in Moscow and
several other Russian cities Wednesday, after weekend rioting in the capital
left dozens injured.
Hundreds of riot police outside the Kievsky station in central Moscow hauled
into police vans mostly young men and teenagers who were shouting racist
slogans and raising their hands in Nazi salutes. Some were lined up against
buses and searched by police. Officers confiscated an arsenal of weapons,
including traumatic guns, knives and metal bars, police spokesman Viktor
Biryukov said.
Police rounded up about 60 protesters in St. Petersburg, where radical
groups also planned a gathering Wednesday.
Riot police prevented clashes in Krasnodar and Rostov-on-Don, southern
Russian cities with large non-Slavic populations where ethnic clashes have
been frequent in recent years, officials said. Dozens of mostly young men
have been detained in central Russia and Siberia, Russian news agencies
reported.
Resentment has been rising among Slavic Russians over the growing presence
in Moscow and elsewhere of people from the southern Caucasus region, most of
them Muslims. People from other parts of the former Soviet Union, including
Central Asia, Armenia and Azerbaijan, also face ethnic discrimination and
are frequent victims of hate crimes.
While ethnic Russians amount to about four-fifths of Russia's population of
142 million, the country is also home to some 180 ethnic groups. The
Caucasus region with its mountainous terrain and isolated valleys is home to
at least 100 ethnicities including Chechens, who waged two separatist wars
against Moscow after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Analysts say it was the Chechen conflict, with atrocities and killings of
civilians committed by both Russian federal forces and militant Islamists,
that triggered the rise of xenophobia and neo-Nazism in Russia — and the
growing resentment of Caucasus natives to ethnic Russians and Moscow's rule.
Despite poverty and instability, the Caucasus region has Russia's highest
birth rate, and tens of thousands of young people flee home for central
Russia and Siberian oil towns in search of jobs and a better future.
The Kievsky train station, where most of the detentions took place, is
popular with street merchants from the Caucasus. The majority of those
detained were Slavic Russians, although some ethnic minorities from the
Caucasus were also taken into custody.
Police declined immediate comment on when those detained would be released
or whether they would face charges.
An expert on hate crimes predicted, however, that most of them would be
released shortly.
"Police will ride them around town and let them go; they won't find enough
place for them in police stations," Alexander Verkhovsky of the Sova center
told the Gazeta.ru online daily.
Moscow mayor Sergei Sobyanin said no injuries were reported.
"Police will severely punish any provocations and violence," he said in
televised remarks.
Authorities sought to prevent the kind of rioting that took place outside
the Kremlin on Saturday, when mainly soccer fans chanted "Russia for
Russians!" during clashes in which dozens of people were injured. Many
soccer fans are linked with neo-Nazis and other radical racist groups that
mushroomed in Russia after the 1991 Soviet collapse.
The violence over the weekend had raised new doubts about the government's
ability to control the rising tide of xenophobia, which poses a serious
threat to Russia's existence as a multiethnic state. It also embarrassed the
Kremlin just days after FIFA awarded the 2018 World Cup to Russia, and
raised questions about Russia's ability to safely stage international
sporting events, including the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi.
The weekend rally began as a protest against the killing of a member of the
Spartak Moscow soccer team's fan club, who was shot with rubber bullets
during clashes with Caucasus natives at a bus stop earlier this month.
Spartak fans claimed corrupt policemen detained one suspected killer
following the fight, but released others because they had powerful backers
in the Caucasus.
Moscow police chief Vladimir Kolokoltsev acknowledged Monday that
investigators had made a mistake and said three more suspects have been
arrested.
Russian media have been abuzz with rumors that some people from the Caucasus
could try to take revenge for Saturday's riots, even as community leaders
described the allegations as a provocation and called for calm.
Anxieties about what would happen Wednesday were palpable hours before
protesters starting gathering. A shopping mall just outside the train
station shut down hours ahead of schedule, and most stands at a nearby
flower market — operated mostly by people from the Caucasus — were closed.
Authorities towed cars in anticipation of possible clashes and helmeted
police were on standby on a square and around the mall early in the morning.
A video in which anti-Caucasus slogans were interlaced with footage of
ethnic minorities from southern Russia beating up policemen and Slavic men
was posted on the website of the Spartak fan club Wednesday.
"They don't respect our traditions," the slogans said in reference to the
Caucasus natives. "Now is the time to show them who's in charge. They went
too far."
On Monday, President Dmitry Medvedev urged police not to hesitate to use
force to put down riots, saying that leaving hate crimes unpunished would
jeopardize stability.
Hate attacks in Russia peaked in 2008, when 115 people were killed and
nearly 500 wounded, according to Sova, an independent watchdog.
Some Russia experts noted links between nationalist groups and some part of
officialdom. Opposition groups claim that pro-Kremlin youth organizations
have hired soccer fans and racists to carry out attacks on Kremlin critics. | e********d 发帖数: 2073 | | d******g 发帖数: 6966 | 3 好。。。只要是墓室淋和白猪互相斗都是好消息。。怎么没两边各死个一千个人呢。。
唉 | e**s 发帖数: 4638 | 4 墓室淋 只要韬光养晦埋头生孩子,出头之日很快会来到的 。。。。。lol | u****n 发帖数: 7521 | |
|