The Ripper
06-02-2011, 05:23 PM
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Právo: Czech neo-Nazis provoke with hard bass
ČTK | 1 JUNE 2011
Prague, May 31 (CTK) - Czech neo-Nazis have started provoking public outrage by a wild dancing at hard bass, a rhythmic electronic music, in Ostrava, north Moravia, but also in other towns, daily Pravo writes yesterday.
Video recordings from the carefully planned public performances virtually flooded the Internet in the past days, Pravo writes.
The hard bass, a craze sweeping across Russia, has thus reached the Czech Republic, it adds.
Tens of people in masked balaclavas make themselves filmed in Ostrava while wildly dancing not only in the streets, but also in shopping malls, trams and outside public buildings, Pravo writes.
In one case, the police forced out a group even from a busy ring road. For a couple of minutes, they were dancing and exploding smoking bombs in the middle of the site.
In the Ostrava-Poruba district, security men led out another group from a shopping mall in which they scared customers with rampant dancing, Pravo writes.
Experts say hard bass, which was born in the Netherlands, is no innocent entertainment. Embraced by radicals from eastern Europe, it bears latent ultra right symbols.
"The inspiration came from Russia where hard bass is very popular now," ultra right movements expert Miroslav Mares told the paper.
"A mass dance, accompanied with feverish movements symbolises domination and unity of the ultra right and it is to scare its opponents," Mares said.
The eastern inspiration is corroborated by the fact that the song sung by the Ostrava neo-Nazis is in Russian, Pravo writes.
One can also see Nazi salutes in one of the videos made in Ostrava, it adds.
"There is a very strong ultra right scene in Russia and Czech neo-Nazis see in it a potential partner in the struggle against Zionism," Mares said.
"One could see recently rather close links between the Czech and Russian ultra right scenes," he added.
"However, in the long run, this type of activities will hardly make the neo-Nazis popular with the general public because a large part of it resents them," Mares said, adding that the first recorded reactions to the published videos seem to confirm this view.
09o9Gs2OZSc
Právo: Czech neo-Nazis provoke with hard bass
ČTK | 1 JUNE 2011
Prague, May 31 (CTK) - Czech neo-Nazis have started provoking public outrage by a wild dancing at hard bass, a rhythmic electronic music, in Ostrava, north Moravia, but also in other towns, daily Pravo writes yesterday.
Video recordings from the carefully planned public performances virtually flooded the Internet in the past days, Pravo writes.
The hard bass, a craze sweeping across Russia, has thus reached the Czech Republic, it adds.
Tens of people in masked balaclavas make themselves filmed in Ostrava while wildly dancing not only in the streets, but also in shopping malls, trams and outside public buildings, Pravo writes.
In one case, the police forced out a group even from a busy ring road. For a couple of minutes, they were dancing and exploding smoking bombs in the middle of the site.
In the Ostrava-Poruba district, security men led out another group from a shopping mall in which they scared customers with rampant dancing, Pravo writes.
Experts say hard bass, which was born in the Netherlands, is no innocent entertainment. Embraced by radicals from eastern Europe, it bears latent ultra right symbols.
"The inspiration came from Russia where hard bass is very popular now," ultra right movements expert Miroslav Mares told the paper.
"A mass dance, accompanied with feverish movements symbolises domination and unity of the ultra right and it is to scare its opponents," Mares said.
The eastern inspiration is corroborated by the fact that the song sung by the Ostrava neo-Nazis is in Russian, Pravo writes.
One can also see Nazi salutes in one of the videos made in Ostrava, it adds.
"There is a very strong ultra right scene in Russia and Czech neo-Nazis see in it a potential partner in the struggle against Zionism," Mares said.
"One could see recently rather close links between the Czech and Russian ultra right scenes," he added.
"However, in the long run, this type of activities will hardly make the neo-Nazis popular with the general public because a large part of it resents them," Mares said, adding that the first recorded reactions to the published videos seem to confirm this view.