Moscow police were yesterday holding almost 400 people under arrest after the Russian capital was rocked by some of its worst ethnically fueled rioting in years, sparked by the killing of an ethnic Russian allegedly by a Muslim migrant from the Caucasus.
An initially peaceful demonstration on Sunday in the Biryulyovo District of Moscow to protest the killing of Yegor Shcherbakov, 25, rapidly descended into bloody clashes with the police that left the glass doors of a shopping center smashed and cars upturned.
The crowd chanted “Russia for Russians!” and other nationalist slogans during a protest that swelled to more than 1,000 people in the industrial district of southern Moscow.
Photo: Reuters
Police said on Sunday evening that 380 people had been arrested over the rioting and were being questioned as part of a criminal investigation into hooliganism.
Another 14 nationalists were later arrested on a passenger train leaving the area carrying gas cannisters, police said. Six anti-riot police were injured and two were still in hospital.
Moscow police brought in hundreds of reinforcements in a bid to deal with the crisis and enforced their extreme “Vulkan” operation plan, which is used in case of a terror attack.
Shcherbakov was murdered overnight on Thursday in the area in front of his girlfriend as they walked out of a billiards club.
Media said that security footage showed his killer was a man of “non-Slavic appearance” from the Northern Caucasus, leading nationalists to conclude the murderer was a Muslim labor migrant.
The mass-circulation Komsomolskaya Pravda daily alleged that a fight had begun between the two men after the killer insulted the girlfriend. Shcherbakov’s friends then put pictures of the suspected killer on their social network accounts in a bid to find him.
Tensions have ratcheted up in recent years in big cities like Moscow between ethnic Russians and migrants from Russia’s largely Muslim Northern Caucasus, as well as the Muslim states of former Soviet Central Asia.
The protesters in Biryulyovo accused the police of failing to swiftly investigate the murder and also called on the authorities to toughen up migration legislation.
The topic of immigration was the single biggest issue in last month’s elections for Moscow mayor won by pro-Kremlin incumbent Sergei Sobyanin, with the top opposition candidate Alexei Navalny also urging a tougher line.
Sobyanin ordered a thorough investigation into Shcherbakov’s murder, but also called on all those responsible for the Biryulyovo riots to be brought to justice.
Local police said that the murderer had hardly left any traces and it was not possible to solve the crime in a matter of days.
“We are doing everything to solve the crime,” said the police chief for southern Moscow Alexander Polovinka, quoted by Interfax.
After a largely peaceful protest on Saturday, the rioting on Sunday began when a group of protestors attacked a wholesale vegetable market where they thought the suspected killer was hiding.
The protesters threw empty beer bottles at shop windows and hurled clubs and even hammers at a riot police force that rushed to the scene in about a dozen buses.
Wholesale vegetable complexes in Moscow often employ large numbers of migrant workers in shadowy circumstances and Russian Interior Minister Vladimir Kolokoltsev said more had to be done to deal with the situation.
“Otherwise all provocateurs and extremists will use any possibility to get young people onto the barricades,” Kolokoltsev said at a televised meeting.
The clashes were the worst such ethnically fueled unrest since Russian soccer fans and ultra-nationalists went on the rampage on Manezhnaya Square outside the Kremlin walls in December 2010.
In a similar scenario, they were demonstrating against the killing of an ethnic Russian soccer fan in a fight with a group from the Northern Caucasus.
“This format of popular unrest has now become standard for the new Russia,” columnist Dmitry Steshin wrote in Komsomolskaya Pravda.
“A brutal, motive-less murder of an ethnic Russian by migrants, the impotence of the police and the outburst of ‘popular democracy’ in its most destructive form,” he wrote.
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