Los Angeles Times

Ukraine attack tied to neo-Nazis

Eight people are in custody in the assault on a camp in Ukraine that has left one dead.

- By Mansur Mirovalev Mirovalev is a special correspond­ent.

One man is killed and four people, including a boy, are injured at a Roma camp.

KIEV, Ukraine — A violent attack on a Roma encampment in forest lands outside the western Ukrainian city of Lviv has left a 23year-old man dead and four others injured, including a boy and a pregnant woman.

The attack late Saturday was the latest and by far the most violent in a string of attacks on Ukraine’s Roma communitie­s, an itinerant ethnic group sometimes called Gypsies.

Authoritie­s said seven masked men, believed to be associated with a neo-Nazi group, attacked the Roma community with knives, chains and metal rods, stabbing 23-year-old David Pap to death and seriously injuring a 10-year-old boy. A police video showed the encampment of tents and wagons was badly damaged in the attack.

It was the fifth attack on a Roma settlement in the last two months.

“The attackers executed one man and got to the next one who is now in hospital,” Roma rights advocate Mykola Yurchenko said. “The guy, 19 years old, did not even try to run, he was standing on his knees begging for mercy, but then the police arrived.”

The suspected assailants were apprehende­d along with a 20-year-old organizer, police said. Authoritie­s said the attackers called themselves “sober and angry youth” and are affiliated with the Misanthrop­ic Division, one of many neo-Nazi groups that have mushroomed throughout Ukraine in recent years.

The attackers also referred to themselves as Lemberg Jugend, or Youth of Lemberg, a reference to Lviv’s name when it was part of the Austrian empire and a phrase that mimics the moniker of “Hitler Youth,” Ukrainian media reported. The group posted a video titled “A Small Report From a Gypsy Safari” on its YouTube channel, but it was removed shortly after the suspects’ arrest, police said.

Though Ukraine lost almost a fifth of its population during World War II, some descendant­s of the soldiers who fought German Nazis now sport swastika tattoos and shave their heads, and white supremacis­t and neoNazi groups have become feared forces in the country.

Hundreds of the activists, soccer fans and ultranatio­nalists formed the Azov Battalion, a paramilita­ry force that has been fighting pro-Russia separatist­s in the eastern provinces of Donetsk and Luhansk since 2014.

The battalion is credited by some with helping the Ukrainian military regain key areas.

They were “the only real political force in Ukraine that is ready to join the army and fight well,” said Nikolay Mitrokhin, a faculty member at the University of Eastern Finland in Joensuu and expert on the Russian-Ukrainian conflict.

Pro-Kremlin media in Russia, however, contend their military successes are a sign that Ukraine has become a haven for neo-Nazis who want to instigate a “genocide” of ethnic Russians.

“Russia benefits indirectly [from such reports] to keep Ukraine unstable, to tell the domestic audience that Ukraine is failing,” said Anna Hrytsenko, a human rights activist in Kharkiv, a city in eastern Ukraine.

Authoritie­s and analysts were quick to blame Moscow for the attack on the Roma settlement.

“Russia may be behind” the attack, Vasily Hrytsak, head of the SBU, Ukraine’s top law enforcemen­t agency. “We understand that Russians are always trying to play with the so-called interethni­c issues.”

The far-right ideology in Ukraine is rooted in the nationalis­t movement of the early 1990s, when the first generation of post-Soviet politician­s lionized anticommun­ist figures who collaborat­ed with German Nazis during World War II in their effort to carve an independen­t Ukraine out of the Soviet empire.

In recent years, thousands of far-right activists have marched with torches and raise their hands in a Nazi salute during officially sanctioned rallies in city centers. Ukraine’s top law enforcemen­t officials, including Interior Minister Arsen Avakov, have been criticized for being too lenient on the groups.

In mid-June, about 150 nationalis­ts with the group C14 blocked a street in central Kiev, the Ukrainian capital, to halt a LGBTQ march. They clashed with riot police and assaulted the officers with tear gas, police said. Dozens were detained but never charged.

In late April, C14, whose name is derived from a 14word white supremacis­t slogan, announced that its activists had attacked and burned a Roma encampment in a Kiev park, forcing residents, including women and children, to flee.

Three more attacks on Roma encampment­s took place in Kiev and two Ukrainian regions.

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