http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,6191546,00.htmlhttp://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,6191510_1,00.jpgProtestors made Nazi salutes
during an anti-immigrant rally
Two nationalist groups made their presence known during demonstrations in Moscow. To mark National Unity Day, the far right railed against immigrants, while pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi called for an end to crime.
Thousands of Russian nationalists rallied against immigration Thursday in Moscow, in one of the capital's largest far-right demonstrations in years. Far-right organizers, including members of the Slavic Force movement, boasted at least 5,000 for an anti-immigrant rally in a suburb in the city's south.
Right-wing extremists shouted "Russia for the Russians," and carried banners calling for "White Power" and "Orthodox Faith or Death."
http://www.dw-world.de/image/0,,6191507_1,00.jpgThe demonstration was focused against immigrants,
but anti-Semitic chants were also heard
The demonstrators in Moscow got support from Preston Wiginton, an American advocate of white supremacy, who has earlier been refused entrance into the United Kingdom.
He fulminated against what he called "the cult of multiculturalism."