WILLIAM WHEELER
ONE evening in September 2011, Ali Rahimi, a 27-year-old Afghan asylum seeker, was hanging around with
friends outside his building in central Athens
when more than a dozen Greeks approached. Several men set upon Mr. Rahimi, one
with a knife. Panicked, he fled into his apartment and fought back, managing to
push the men out the door. He found blood gushing from just above his heart,
one of five stab wounds in his back and chest.
Parts
of Athens feel
like a war zone. Racist gangs cruise the streets at night in search of victims.
Themis Skordeli, a member of the group that is accused of stabbing Mr. Rahimi,
ran unsuccessfully for Parliament on the ticket of Golden Dawn, a fascist group
that is currently the third most popular party in Greece .
Golden
Dawn was founded in 1985 under the order of the imprisoned leader of the Greek
junta. The party entered the international spotlight after some of its members
reportedly participated in the 1995 Srebrenica massacre of Bosnian Muslims. Its
publication praises the Third Reich and often features photographs of Hitler
and other Nazis.
By
exploiting a security void and rising xenophobia, the party won a seat on the
Athens City Council in 2010. In Greece ’s
election earlier this year, the party capitalized on widespread anti-immigrant
sentiment and contempt for a political establishment that brought the country
to the brink of economic collapse. It won almost 7 percent of the national vote
and 18 seats in Parliament.
Recent
polls show that its strength continues to grow, and its support runs as high as
50 percent among police officers, who routinely fail to investigate growing
numbers of hate crimes.
Far-right
ultranationalist groups are exploiting old enmities and new fears across the
Continent. Although this is not the Europe of the 1930s, the disillusioned
citizens of countries like Greece and Hungary have turned increasingly to
simple answers, electing parties that blame familiar scapegoats — Jews,
Gypsies, gays and foreigners — for their ills.
What’s
at stake is the health of European democracy, and the values and institutions
on which it rests. But while the euro crisis touched off a scramble to halt a
financial meltdown, European leaders have done virtually nothing to reverse the
union’s dangerous political trends.
Beneath
the looming basilica of Athens ’
largest church, middle-aged men and women in black Golden Dawn T-shirts were
busy one bright September morning distributing food to needy Greeks. Kids ran
across the courtyard, which was painted with the party’s unofficial platform:
“Get foreigners out of Greece .”
Clusters of fit, stoic young men in dark glasses ringed the perimeter.
Nikolaos
Michos, a square-jawed Golden Dawn member of Parliament with the build and
tattoos of a heavyweight boxer, leaned against a bloodmobile watching. He wore
a black polo embossed with the party’s Swastika-like logo. “We’re fighters and we’re not going to back down,” he said, referring
to death threats from leftists and the burning of a Golden Dawn office. “But
they’re not striking fear into us because every center they destroy, we’ll
build new ones,” he added.
Maria
Chandraki, 29, an unemployed beautician, hadn’t heard of Golden Dawn until the
last election. “Their positions may be extreme,” she said, holding plastic bags
of food she’d just received. “But the situation is extreme as well. So we need
extreme measures.” She went on, “We can’t have so many nations and so many
different sets of values and ideals under the same roof.”
A few blocks down the street, a crowd was leaving a mosque after Friday
Prayer. At the mention of Golden Dawn, immigrant men began lifting their shirts
to show their scars. A short, sullen-looking young man with a cut across his
nose and freshly sutured cheekbone, was pushed forward by the crowd. Just the
night before, he said, he was beaten and cut with a knife by “fascists.”
“Go into the Omonia police station,” said
another man. “You will see how violence is going on.” Several blocks away, I
walked into just such a scene. As I stepped out of the elevator at the police
station, I saw an officer screaming at a black man and backhanding him hard
across the shoulder.
NIKOS
KATAPODIS, 69, can see the crossroads where his family has lived since 1863. A
bald, chain-smoking funeral-home owner, Mr. Katapodis describes the Greek
government with a string of expletives. The flood of immigrants over the last
decade created ghettos in central Athens ,
he explains. Crime rates rose, property values dropped and bars appeared on
second-floor windows. “It looks like a prison,” he said, nodding to the street.
“Today it reminds me of the late 1940s,” he adds. “You see people scrounging
for food in the trash cans.”
Although
he didn’t vote for Golden Dawn, he sees it as “the only party that is actually
doing things for the Greek people” — a cross between the welfare state and the
Mafia. If he needed an escort to walk down the street or help paying for his
cancer medicine, he’d call Golden Dawn. “They’re doing what the politicians
should be doing,” he said. “There’s a hole, and they fill it.”
Authoritarian
elements in the Greek government have a history of using far-right groups to
outsource political violence against critics. Recent moves to rein in Golden
Dawn came only after it grew too powerful to control and the state felt its own
authority was challenged, explained Anastassia Tsoukala, a legal scholar. “They
were bitten by their own snake,” she said. And Greece is not alone. Golden Dawn’s
rise has parallels across Europe , and its
significance should be of Continental concern.
IN
September, I sat in a Budapest
courthouse as four men with tattoos and shaved heads filed past in handcuffs. Called
the Death Squad, the men were charged with six murders during a wave of attacks
against the country’s Roma minority, including one in which the attackers
tossed a Molotov cocktail at a house and then gunned down a father and his
5-year-old son as they tried to escape the flames.
In
the wake of the Death Squad murders, Kristof Domina founded the Athena
Institute to monitor European extremist groups. The Budapest-based institute’s
Web site features a map of 114 extremist groups active in 13 European
countries. Although there are reports that these groups communicate and
sometimes travel across the Continent in search of weapons or training, the
problem hasn’t been dealt with at a Pan-European level.
Unlike
Greece, Hungary has a history of fascist groups, including the Hungarian
National Front, an anti-Semitic, anti-Roma group that established an annual
international neo-Nazi event and regularly holds paramilitary training
exercises on a former Soviet military base (“an incubator for the Breivik-type
people,” says Mr. Domina, referring to the Norwegian mass murderer Anders
Behring Breivik). Since Hungary ’s
economic crisis began, new extremist groups have emerged and the Hungarian
National Front has gained national prominence.
In
2009, Jobbik, a self-described “radically patriotic Christian party” with an
affiliated militia, entered Hungary ’s
Parliament. To rally its base, the party often relies on hate marches and
intimidation campaigns that stoke racist fervor.
While
Jobbik has traditionally tried to distance itself from more extreme groups, its
true colors were on display at an August rally in the village of Devecser ,
where a Jobbik member of Parliament delivered the opening address. Subsequent
speeches from other groups grew increasingly violent, climaxing in a tirade
about “how the Roma people have to die and you have to kill them and we have to
clean out the country,” as one witness recalled. The crowd eventually began
throwing stones at Roma houses, chanting “you will die” and vowing to return.
European leaders must not cede the
battleground in the war of ideas. They should publicly denounce parties that
espouse racist doctrines and spew hate-filled rhetoric and clearly define and
defend the shared values of an increasingly integrated Europe .
To do so, they must develop a
Pan-European approach to monitoring hate crimes and investigating right-wing
extremist networks that operate across borders. And the European Union must
ensure that all member states, old and new, respect the same criteria that
countries currently aspiring to join the European Union are required to meet,
especially maintaining the “stability of institutions guaranteeing democracy,
the rule of law, human rights, respect for and protection of minorities.” Otherwise,
Europe faces the specter of more xenophobic
violence and the unraveling of the liberal democratic order that has drawn so
many persecuted people to seek asylum and opportunity on European shores.
In Athens , Sayd Jafari owns a cafe frequented by
fellow Afghans. It has been repeatedly ransacked by mobs of black-clad
attackers wielding sticks, chains and knives and performing fascist salutes.
Like others who have been
assaulted, Mr. Jafari is also contemplating returning home to Afghanistan . “There,
maybe someone has a bomb hidden on his body that he detonates,” he says. “Here,
you don’t see where the knife that kills you comes from.”
sourche: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/18/opinion/sunday/europes-new-fascists.html?pagewanted=3&_r=0&src=recg
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