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Sympathizers of Ukrainian extremist youth group detained in Russia’s Voronezh

According to the Federal Security Service, they were involved in promoting the ideas of neo-Nazism and mass killings
The Russian Investigative Committee vehicle Alexander Shcherbak/TASS, archive
The Russian Investigative Committee vehicle
© Alexander Shcherbak/TASS, archive

 

MOSCOW, February 18. /TASS/. Russia’s Federal Security Service announced on Thursday that the agency had thwarted the activity of sympathizers of an extremist Ukrainian youth group linked to promoting the ideas of neo-Nazism and mass killings.

"The FSB in cooperation with Russia’s Interior Ministry and the Russian Investigative Committee has foiled the activity of supporters of a Ukrainian youth radical group MKU in Voronezh, linked to promoting the ideology of neo-Nazism and mass killings, fueling inter-ethnic conflicts and committing violent crimes," the FSB said.

The FSB officers seized extremist literature, emblems of nationalist organizations, bladed weapons and means of communication for storing data on committed crimes. Besides, an item resembling a mortar round from the Great Patriotic War was found in a garage belonging to one of the suspects.

Two criminal cases have been opened against three local citizens aged 18, 19 and 33 into the activity aimed at stirring hatred and hostility as well as humiliating ethnic dignity in public as part of an organized group, the Russian Investigative Committee said.

According to investigators, a 19-year-old man organized the group in January 2020. The investigators have questioned six individuals, who have information on the illegal activity of the extremist group. The court will consider motions on choosing pre-trial restriction measures against the suspects.