Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 10 – All wars
breed vicious and violent behavior not only on the front lines but often far behind
them, and those qualities are now spreading across the Russian Federation as a
result of Moscow’s illegal occupation and suppression of Crimea and its
continuing intervention in southeastern Ukraine.
Yesterday in Yekaterinburg, 20 young
men who identified themselves as “fighters from Luhansk” broke into the
apartment of Nikolay Bogdanov, a leader of the Common Task movement who
supports the unity of Ukraine and threatened to kill him (nr2.com.ua/News/world_and_russia/V-Ekaterinburge-nachalis-napadeniya-na-proukrainskih-aktivistov-90078.html. Cf. newsru.com/crime/09feb2015/lnrattckexjudgeurl.html
and znak.com/svrdl/news/2015-02-09/1035214.html?fb_action_ids=942474409098720).
Bogdanov called the police who
arrived and detained several of his attackers, but those not arrested then went
on to attack people in a local Uzbek café, located approximately 300 meters
from Bogdanov’s residence, an indication that the detentions did little to
dissuade them from further violence.
Bogdanov told Novy Region 2’s
Kseniya Kirillova that he is certain that those who attacked him did so because
of his defense of Ukraine against Russian aggression. He has a large following
on the Internet of more than 1150 people, and he writes regularly about what is
going on in Ukraine.
His opponents posted his telephone
number and address on line, virtually inviting people to attack him, something that
has happened, he said.
Tragically, this is not the only move
against pro-Ukraine activists in Yekaterinburg alone. Stanislav Khauz was
attacked by four unknown men in the yard of his apartment building, and while
he says he cannot be certain that his Internet postings in support of Ukraine
were behind their actions, it seems likely that they were.
And another Yekaterinburg activist,
Pavel Zdravomyslov has been threatened although not yet
attacked. He told Kirillova that the attacks began after he queried police
concerning the legality of actions by Sverdlovsk veterans groups to recruit
people from the region to fight in the Donbas.
Bogdanov says that he fears for his life and the security
of his family and has announced that he will leave Russia “in the next two
days.”
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