Macho Men



The Guardian report that a ridiculous gang of macho bikers who go by the silly name of the 'Night Wolves' wants to travel to Berlin to mark the defeat of Nazi Germany.

No mention is made of the years of repression that followed under the rule of the Soviet Union although this is hardly surprising given that their leader is a fan of Joseph Stalin and friend of Vladimir Putin.

To be fair the Polish biker from Lubin quoted in the article points out that the Red Army did nothing to bring freedom to his country, quite the opposite in fact.

So why would EU member countries allow these clowns the time of day never mind the opportunity to peddle their propaganda in this childish parade.  

Russian biker gang to ride Red Army's route through Europe


Night Wolves plan two-week rally to mark Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany, angering eastern Europeans over bikers’ support for Putin’s Ukraine policy

Vladimir Putin, left, then Russian prime minister, with Night Wolves’ leader, Alexander ‘The Surgeon’ Zaldostanov, in 2009. Photograph: Alexey Druzhinin/AFP/Getty Images

Agence France-Presse in Moscow

A Russian biker gang backed by Vladimir Putin is planning to ride through Europe to celebrate the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in the second world war, sparking controversy in central Europe.

A two-week 3,750-mile (6,000km) rally by Russian bikers including the Night Wolves, a fiercely nationalistic motorcycle club, will pass through Belarus, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Austria, before ending in Berlin on 9 May – the day Russia marks the end of its war against Nazi Germany.

“To Berlin!” says a page on the biker gang’s website dedicated to the rally, which is set to begin on 25 April, in an allusion to the Red Army’s famous battle cry.

The commemorative event comes with tensions running high between Russia and the west over the crisis in Ukraine.

The Night Wolves’ leader, Alexander Zaldostanov, who praises Stalin and has vowed to fight the anti-Putin opposition, is subject to US and Canadian sanctions for his support of Moscow’s seizure of Crimea from Ukraine last year.

The plan sparked controversy in central Europe, with some welcoming the Russians and others saying they should be banned from European Union territory. The Polish foreign ministry dubbed the ride a “problem”.

The bikers insist their journey is not politically motivated. “This is a memorial rally,” said Andrei Bobrovsky, the organiser.

“The main goal is to pay respects to those killed on WWII battlefields in the struggle against Hitler’s Nazis – soldiers and innocent civilians,” he told AFP. “Another goal is to develop and strengthen good neighbourly ties.”

During their journey the bikers will visit war memorials, Auschwitz and Dachau death camps and Berlin’s Treptower Park, famous for its Soviet war memorial.

Bobrovsky said many Europeans wanted to join the rally, including Germans.


 
Vladimir Putin with the leader of the Night Wolves in Russia in 2011. Photograph: AP

The Russian ride has sparked controversy in Poland, one of the fiercest backers of Ukraine’s pro-western government, and several other central European countries.

A Polish Facebook page, dubbed “No to the passage of Russian bandits through Poland”, calls on the authorities to ban the Russians from the EU.

Jarek Podworski, a biker from the city of Lublin in eastern Poland who helped set up the Facebook page, said that it was “unimaginable” for bikers who have supported pro-Moscow separatists in eastern Ukraine to ride through EU countries.

“We know very well what they are doing in Ukraine,” Podworski told AFP. “Brandishing Russian flags, they want to trace the footsteps of the Red Army, which in reality did not bring freedom to Poland.

“The Russians are testing the limits of their expansion. If they pass, there is a risk that in three years they will come for good.”

Podworski called on Poles to disrupt the rally by blocking roads. The Polish foreign ministry said it was “watching the problem”.

Similar protest groups also appeared on Facebook in Slovakia and the Czech Republic. “We do not agree with the passage through our territory of a gang which publicly supports the politics of aggression,” opponents of the rally said in Slovakia.

“The Night Wolves are a criminal organisation, which was involved in the seizure of Crimea and the Ukraine fighting,” added a Czech Facebook page protesting against the ride.

But others were in favour. “Let Russian, Slovak, Czech or Soviet flags accompany our friends on their way to Vienna and Berlin,” wrote one supporter on the Czech Facebook page.

Zaldostanov, who goes by the nickname Khirurg (Surgeon), dismissed the critical remarks. “We are not a $100 bill, not everyone is going to like us,” he said last week. “We are not going to drop our plans.”

The Night Wolves, sometimes seen as Russia’s answer to the American Hells Angels biker gang, count Putin among their fans.

The Russian president rode a Harley-Davidson trike at a bikers’ get-together in Crimea in 2010.
The headline of this article was corrected on Tuesday 14 April 2015 because it stated that Vladimir Putin would take part in the biker gang’s rally.

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