Russian National Socialist Party

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Russia

Politics portal

The Russian National Socialist Party (Russian: Русская Национальная Социалистическая Партия) is a neo-Nazi party based in Russia. The group achieved international notoriety in 2007 when a video appeared on the internet purportedly showing members decapitating one immigrant and shooting another.

Development

The party grew out of the followers of Konstantin Kasimovsky, a leading member of Pamyat in the immediate aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union. He split from the Pamyat-led National Patriotic Front in 1992 and formed his own party, the Russian National Union, the following year. This party re-emerged as the RNSP around 1999 after Kasimovsky closed down the Russian National Union and began to move away from the emphasis placed on the Russian Orthodox Church by that group.[1] Despite this lessening of emphasis on religion the party's website lists Orthodox Christianity as one of its four main ideological principles, the others being a strong state, aggressive Russian nationalism and non-Marxist socialism.[2] The party symbol is the Labarum of Constantine the Great and since 1999 have published a newspaper Pravoye Soprotivleniye ('Right Resistance'), itself a successor to the earlier journal Shturmovik.[2]

Kasimovsky has since claimed to be the leader of a group called Russian Action although its nature, and that of its relationship to the RNSP, remains unclear.[3]

Internet video showing apparent executions of migrants in August 2007

On 15 August 2007 Victor Milkov, a 23-year-old student at the Maykop State Technological Institute in Adygea, an RNSP member, was arrested for distributing a video (named Execution of a Tajik and a Dagestani, more known as the so-called "Russian neo nazi beheading" video in forums and on video sharing sites) on the internet which shows two migrants apparently being executed by a "militant wing" of the RNSP.[4][5]

It is later identified that the victims were 24-year-old Shamil Odamanov from Russia's mainly Muslim Dagestan region, and 20-year-old Salakhetdin Azizov from Tajikistan.[6][7] The two men can be heard saying "We were arrested by Russian national socialists" before Odamanov is stabbed and beheaded and Azizov is shot in the head by two masked men dressed in combat fatigues.[8]

According to Russian Minister of the Interior the video is a fake.[9] However, prosecutors say that the video is real.[10][11]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.