Terrified villagers barricaded themselves in their homes as 200 Neo-Nazis chanted "Sieg Heil" and "Heil Hitler" at a weekend meeting in northern Poland which police did nothing to stop, a newspaper reported Monday.
Published:
5 July 2000 y., Wednesday
About 10 police monitored the gathering of skinheads in a disco in the village of Rogiedle on Saturday evening, according to the Super Express newspaper. "We only learnt about their presence when they were already inside. There was no public unrest. They were on private ground. The owner of the disco told us they were celebrating a birthday of someone there," said police spokeswoman Bozena Przyborowska.
The paper said a 17-year-old was recently murdered in the village and several buildings had suffered arson attacks. Polish law bans organizations which promote Nazism, fascism or communism.
Šaltinis:
Agence France Presse
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
14-year-old Nathan Clark drowned after being sucked into the Thai water park in the popular resort of Pattaya pool's pumping system.
more »
The sixth day of Spain's Pamplona bull run got off with a bang.
more »
China drafts its first animal protection law to prevent animal abuse.
more »
You arrive at the airport ready for your flight - but upon arrival you find the flight has been overbooked leaving you waiting for another one.
more »
Former Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, the leading architect of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, has died in his sleep at his home in Washington, D.C.
more »
Tips and advice for a hassle-free holiday in Europe.
more »
Some EU countries are making it hard for other EU nationals to obtain residence permits.
more »
People, who lay claim to the state sponsored housing loans, can already submit applications on receiving a credit under preferential conditions in Bank SNORAS.
more »
From July 1, all gambling activities in Russia have to move to 4 designated zones, far from the bright lights of the big cities, or cease altogether.
more »
French President Nicolas Sarkozy supports a group of legislators, who've said they're concerned that increasing numbers of women are wearing burqas in France.
more »