Update: Moscow Knife Attack On 2 Armenians Re-Qualified As Race-Hate

UPDATE: MOSCOW KNIFE ATTACK ON 2 ARMENIANS RE-QUALIFIED AS RACE-HATE

RIA Novosti, Russia
July 3 2006

MOSCOW, July 3 (RIA Novosti) – Moscow prosecutors said Monday that
the stabbing of two ethnic Armenians in the Russian capital on July
1 must be re-qualified as race-hate attack rather than hooliganism.

A representative of the Moscow prosecutor’s office said earlier Monday
that the Saturday afternoon attack on the two men, aged 23 and 26,
was "a result of a conflict with a group of 17- and 18-year-olds."

An investigation was launched into hooliganism, a charge often brought
against suspects in assaults and similar incidents.

"The Moscow prosecutor’s office has instructed prosecutors of
Moscow subway to re-qualify the charges," said Sergei Marchenko,
a representative of Moscow prosecutor’s office.

Police said they had taken a resident of central Russia into custody
in connection with the assault. "The detained 24-year-old resident
of Lipetsk is suspected of attacking two Armenians," a spokesman said.

"The suspect was on the wanted list already."

The spokesman said police was checking another group of people
suspected of involvement in the attack.

"Investigators know their names and other details," he said.

This is another attack in a series of race-hate crimes that have
recently rocked the country.

The city of Voronezh in central Russia has seen at least seven
apparently racially motivated killings of non-white foreigners over
the past six years, including the murder of a Peruvian student last
October.

St. Petersburg has been suffering from negative publicity over alleged
neo-Nazi attacks and murders, including the killing of a student from
Senegal in April and the stabbing of a nine-year-old girl of mixed
Russian-African origin in early 2006.

In an effort to combat these extremist and xenophobic trends, Russia
set up a nationwide public movement, Our Russia, in late June. The
movement comprises politicians, entrepreneurs, figures from the arts
world and human rights activists, who will work closely with all of
Russia’s religious and cultural communities.

On June 20, Russia’s Supreme Court quashed the guilty verdict given
to a man convicted of a knife-wielding attack on a Moscow synagogue
that left nine people injured and sent his case for retrial. A lower
court had sentenced Alexander Koptsev to a 13-year prison term for
attempted murder but cleared him of instigating racial hatred.