Patriotes d'Ukraine (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Patriotes d'Ukraine" in French language version.

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bbc.co.uk

bbc.com

doi.org

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  • Anton Shekhovstov, « The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party. », Europe-Asia Studies, vol. 63, no 2,‎ , p. 203–228 (DOI 10.1080/09668136.2011.547696, S2CID 155079439) :

    « During the second half of the 1990s, the SNPU recruited Nazi skinheads and football hooligans. At the same time, the party decided to reorganise its 'popular guard units' to form the Tovarystvo spryyannya zbroinym sylam ta viiskovo-mors'komu flotu Ukrayiny 'Patriot Ukrayiny' (Society of Assistance to Armed Forces and Navy of Ukraine 'Patriot of Ukraine'), headed by Andrii Parubii. However, although the 'Patriot of Ukraine' was formed in 1996, it was not until 1999 that it became a full-fledged organisation. Its first convention took place in Lviv in December 1999 and was celebrated by a night-time torch procession through the city streets… [In 2004, the SNPU] the convention disbanded the Patriot of Ukraine, as this paramilitary organisation as such and its overtly racist stances in particular posed a threat to the new 'respectable' image of the Freedom Party… The Kharkiv local organisation of the Patriot of Ukraine refused to disband and renewed its membership in 2005. The following year, it managed to register as a regional social organisation, but, from then on, it had no organisational ties with the maternal party. »

  • Volodymyr Ishchenko, « Fighting Fences vs Fighting Monuments: Politics of Memory and Protest Mobilization in Ukraine », Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, vol. 19, nos 1–2,‎ , p. 369–395 (DOI 10.1080/0965156X.2011.611680, S2CID 145492425) :

    « ...rightist non-partisan groups including overtly racist "autonomous nationalists" (http://reactor.org.ua) and the neo-Nazi "Patriot of Ukraine" (http://www.patriotukr.org.ua/). For the far right sector politics of memory actions comprised 29.2% of all protest actions with their participation, this was larger than the shares of social-economic, political struggle, and civic rights protest issues (Table 7)… After the notorious death of Maksym Chaika in a fight with antifascists in Odessa in April 2009, Yushchenko unambiguously supported the far right interpretation of the accident claiming the victim to be "an activist of a patriotic civic association" consciously murdered by "pro-Russia militants" ignoring Chaika's connections with rightist football hooligans and his membership in the "SICH" ("Glory and Honor") organization, a participant in the Social-Nationalist Assembly (http://sna.in.ua/) together with the neo-Nazi group "'Patriots of Ukraine.'" »

  • Viacheslav Likhachev, « Right-Wing Extremism on the Rise in Ukraine », Russian Politics and Law, vol. 51, no 5,‎ september–october 2013, p. 59–74 (DOI 10.2753/RUP1061-1940510503, S2CID 144614340) :

    « The main extrasystemic ultraright group in Ukraine in recent years has been Patriot of Ukraine (led by Andrii Bilets'kyi). The core of the organization was formed in Kharkiv in 2004, when a group of activists belonging to the SNPU's paramilitary youth wing of the same name refused to accept the leaders' decision to disband the militarized organization while "rebranding" their party. By 2006, Patriot of Ukraine had become a public movement with branches in many regions of the country. Activists appeared in camouflage uniform with neo-Nazi symbols. Many public actions were organized—targeting migrants, political opponents, and others. Violence (including the use of firearms) was repeatedly used against political opponents and members of ethnic and sexual minorities. In 2011, during the investigation of several criminal cases (one charge concerned the preparation of a terrorist act), almost the entire leadership of the organization in Kyiv and Kharkiv ended up behind bars; this paralyzed the movement and caused it to split… Members of almost all the organizations listed are known to have engaged in ideologically motivated violence. »

ethz.ch

isn.ethz.ch

  • Tadeusz A. Olszański, « Svoboda Party – The New Phenomenon on the Ukrainian Right-Wing Scene », Centre for Eastern Studies, vol. OSW Commentary, no 56,‎ , p. 6 (lire en ligne, consulté le )

google.ca

books.google.ca

  • Anton Shekhovtsov, Right-Wing Populism in Europe : Politics and Discourse, A&C Black, (lire en ligne), p. 256

    « Interestingly, 'street combat movements' like the SNA no longer focus on ethnic issues: in contrast to the older Ukrainian far right, the new groups are, first and foremost, racist movements. Their disregard for the perceived 'Ukrainian versus Russian' ethno-cultural cleavage allows them to gain support from many 'white' ultra-nationalists. Once drawn to these movements, 'white racists' also contribute to the organizational efficiency of the Svoboda party, which is, to reiterate, considered the only representative of 'white racism' in the Ukrainian electoral sphere. »

googleusercontent.com

webcache.googleusercontent.com

helsinki.org.ua

  • Volodymyr Batchayev, Oleg Martynenko, Association of Ukrainian monitors on observance of human rights, Ukrainian Law Enforcement, Yevhen Zakharov, Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, « 12. Protection against discrimination, racism and xenophobia », ANNUAL HUMAN RIGHTS REPORTS / HUMAN RIGHTS IN UKRAINE, 2009-2010, Helsinki Human Rights Group (consulté le ) : « On the public request, the authorities stopped the musical festival «Traditions of Spirit» near Kyiv, scheduled for June 26–27, 2010, under the aegis of the radical «Social Nationalist Assembly» with the goal to promulgate among the youth the ideas of neo-Nazi and chauvinism. During the festival, the performances of ultra-right musical bands were planned («Sokyra Peruna», «Seitar», «Nachtigall», «White Lions»), who in the lyrics of their songs openly approve and show in romantic light the skinhead movement, promote Hitlerist aesthetics, and encourage to harass national minorities. »

kyivpost.com

opendemocracy.net

osw.waw.pl

patriotukr.org.ua

  • Volodymyr Ishchenko, « Fighting Fences vs Fighting Monuments: Politics of Memory and Protest Mobilization in Ukraine », Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, vol. 19, nos 1–2,‎ , p. 369–395 (DOI 10.1080/0965156X.2011.611680, S2CID 145492425) :

    « ...rightist non-partisan groups including overtly racist "autonomous nationalists" (http://reactor.org.ua) and the neo-Nazi "Patriot of Ukraine" (http://www.patriotukr.org.ua/). For the far right sector politics of memory actions comprised 29.2% of all protest actions with their participation, this was larger than the shares of social-economic, political struggle, and civic rights protest issues (Table 7)… After the notorious death of Maksym Chaika in a fight with antifascists in Odessa in April 2009, Yushchenko unambiguously supported the far right interpretation of the accident claiming the victim to be "an activist of a patriotic civic association" consciously murdered by "pro-Russia militants" ignoring Chaika's connections with rightist football hooligans and his membership in the "SICH" ("Glory and Honor") organization, a participant in the Social-Nationalist Assembly (http://sna.in.ua/) together with the neo-Nazi group "'Patriots of Ukraine.'" »

reactor.org.ua

  • Volodymyr Ishchenko, « Fighting Fences vs Fighting Monuments: Politics of Memory and Protest Mobilization in Ukraine », Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, vol. 19, nos 1–2,‎ , p. 369–395 (DOI 10.1080/0965156X.2011.611680, S2CID 145492425) :

    « ...rightist non-partisan groups including overtly racist "autonomous nationalists" (http://reactor.org.ua) and the neo-Nazi "Patriot of Ukraine" (http://www.patriotukr.org.ua/). For the far right sector politics of memory actions comprised 29.2% of all protest actions with their participation, this was larger than the shares of social-economic, political struggle, and civic rights protest issues (Table 7)… After the notorious death of Maksym Chaika in a fight with antifascists in Odessa in April 2009, Yushchenko unambiguously supported the far right interpretation of the accident claiming the victim to be "an activist of a patriotic civic association" consciously murdered by "pro-Russia militants" ignoring Chaika's connections with rightist football hooligans and his membership in the "SICH" ("Glory and Honor") organization, a participant in the Social-Nationalist Assembly (http://sna.in.ua/) together with the neo-Nazi group "'Patriots of Ukraine.'" »

rid.org.ua

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

  • Anton Shekhovstov, « The Creeping Resurgence of the Ukrainian Radical Right? The Case of the Freedom Party. », Europe-Asia Studies, vol. 63, no 2,‎ , p. 203–228 (DOI 10.1080/09668136.2011.547696, S2CID 155079439) :

    « During the second half of the 1990s, the SNPU recruited Nazi skinheads and football hooligans. At the same time, the party decided to reorganise its 'popular guard units' to form the Tovarystvo spryyannya zbroinym sylam ta viiskovo-mors'komu flotu Ukrayiny 'Patriot Ukrayiny' (Society of Assistance to Armed Forces and Navy of Ukraine 'Patriot of Ukraine'), headed by Andrii Parubii. However, although the 'Patriot of Ukraine' was formed in 1996, it was not until 1999 that it became a full-fledged organisation. Its first convention took place in Lviv in December 1999 and was celebrated by a night-time torch procession through the city streets… [In 2004, the SNPU] the convention disbanded the Patriot of Ukraine, as this paramilitary organisation as such and its overtly racist stances in particular posed a threat to the new 'respectable' image of the Freedom Party… The Kharkiv local organisation of the Patriot of Ukraine refused to disband and renewed its membership in 2005. The following year, it managed to register as a regional social organisation, but, from then on, it had no organisational ties with the maternal party. »

  • Volodymyr Ishchenko, « Fighting Fences vs Fighting Monuments: Politics of Memory and Protest Mobilization in Ukraine », Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, vol. 19, nos 1–2,‎ , p. 369–395 (DOI 10.1080/0965156X.2011.611680, S2CID 145492425) :

    « ...rightist non-partisan groups including overtly racist "autonomous nationalists" (http://reactor.org.ua) and the neo-Nazi "Patriot of Ukraine" (http://www.patriotukr.org.ua/). For the far right sector politics of memory actions comprised 29.2% of all protest actions with their participation, this was larger than the shares of social-economic, political struggle, and civic rights protest issues (Table 7)… After the notorious death of Maksym Chaika in a fight with antifascists in Odessa in April 2009, Yushchenko unambiguously supported the far right interpretation of the accident claiming the victim to be "an activist of a patriotic civic association" consciously murdered by "pro-Russia militants" ignoring Chaika's connections with rightist football hooligans and his membership in the "SICH" ("Glory and Honor") organization, a participant in the Social-Nationalist Assembly (http://sna.in.ua/) together with the neo-Nazi group "'Patriots of Ukraine.'" »

  • Viacheslav Likhachev, « Right-Wing Extremism on the Rise in Ukraine », Russian Politics and Law, vol. 51, no 5,‎ september–october 2013, p. 59–74 (DOI 10.2753/RUP1061-1940510503, S2CID 144614340) :

    « The main extrasystemic ultraright group in Ukraine in recent years has been Patriot of Ukraine (led by Andrii Bilets'kyi). The core of the organization was formed in Kharkiv in 2004, when a group of activists belonging to the SNPU's paramilitary youth wing of the same name refused to accept the leaders' decision to disband the militarized organization while "rebranding" their party. By 2006, Patriot of Ukraine had become a public movement with branches in many regions of the country. Activists appeared in camouflage uniform with neo-Nazi symbols. Many public actions were organized—targeting migrants, political opponents, and others. Violence (including the use of firearms) was repeatedly used against political opponents and members of ethnic and sexual minorities. In 2011, during the investigation of several criminal cases (one charge concerned the preparation of a terrorist act), almost the entire leadership of the organization in Kyiv and Kharkiv ended up behind bars; this paralyzed the movement and caused it to split… Members of almost all the organizations listed are known to have engaged in ideologically motivated violence. »

sna.in.ua

  • Volodymyr Ishchenko, « Fighting Fences vs Fighting Monuments: Politics of Memory and Protest Mobilization in Ukraine », Debatte: Journal of Contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, vol. 19, nos 1–2,‎ , p. 369–395 (DOI 10.1080/0965156X.2011.611680, S2CID 145492425) :

    « ...rightist non-partisan groups including overtly racist "autonomous nationalists" (http://reactor.org.ua) and the neo-Nazi "Patriot of Ukraine" (http://www.patriotukr.org.ua/). For the far right sector politics of memory actions comprised 29.2% of all protest actions with their participation, this was larger than the shares of social-economic, political struggle, and civic rights protest issues (Table 7)… After the notorious death of Maksym Chaika in a fight with antifascists in Odessa in April 2009, Yushchenko unambiguously supported the far right interpretation of the accident claiming the victim to be "an activist of a patriotic civic association" consciously murdered by "pro-Russia militants" ignoring Chaika's connections with rightist football hooligans and his membership in the "SICH" ("Glory and Honor") organization, a participant in the Social-Nationalist Assembly (http://sna.in.ua/) together with the neo-Nazi group "'Patriots of Ukraine.'" »

telegraph.co.uk

ucsj.org

  • (en) « Roots of Svoboda », Union of Councils for Jews in the Former Soviet Union

una-unso.info

vesti.ua

reporter.vesti.ua

voiceofrussia.com

web.archive.org

wikipedia.org

en.wikipedia.org

wikiwix.com

archive.wikiwix.com