site.btaMRF Condemns Clashes in Assenovgrad, Warns against Incitement to Hatred
MRF Condemns Clashes in Assenovgrad, Warns against Incitement to Hatred
 
 Sofia, June 30 (BTA) - The Movement for Rights and Freedoms (MRF) Friday  slammed clashes with Roma people in the southern town of Assenovgrad  and warned against incitement to hatred. "We have witnessed a case of  brutal violence in Assenovgrad, which MRF strongly condemns," said MRF  leader Mustafa Karadayi in Parliament on Friday. In a statement on  behalf of the MRF group he said that the ensuing tensions in Assenovgrad  are a troubling sign of the state of society.
 
 Some 1,500 people joined a protest outside the Town Hall in the southern  town of Assenovgrad on Wednesday evening with calls for removal of Roma  people from the town after clashes between residents of the local Roma  neighbourhood with youths from a rowing club during practice. The spark  was an incident on June 26 when a group of Roma men kicked up a row with  youths in the Forty Springs Lake near the town. The conflict escalated  and moved in the centre of Assenovgrad later in the day where the Roma  reportedly assaulted the young rowers, their coaches and parents. Some  rowers sustained unspecified injuries. Nine of the attackers were  arrested and charged with hooliganism, of whom two with aggravated  battery. Some of the suspects were found to have criminal records.   
 
 Hate speech, indictment to hatred and officialization of hatred is about  to pose problems for democracy in Bulgaria, said Karadayi. "You can't  put out a fire with oil," he warned, referring to inflammatory  statements by Deputy Prime Minister Valeri Simeonov.  "When the state  tolerates people who demonstrate their hatred and behave aggressively,  this is a signal to the public," the MRF leader said.
 
 He added there was general neglect towards violence, acts of hatred and ethnic tension.
 
 Plovdiv District Prosecutor Roumen Popov said that tensions in  Assenovgrad haven't subsided yet and that police presence remains beefed  up. He did not rule out more arrests of participants in the clashes  when their identities are established. More charges are pending for  issuing death threats.
 
 However, Popov said there was evidence for agitators at both protests.  He said that their identities are being established.  Plovdiv Police  Department chief Atanas Ilkov denied firmly any police violence during  Thursday's protest.
 
 A hearing on the restraint measures for the nine Roma detainees was  scheduled for Friday but their lawyers asked for time to study the case  file. 
 
 In a statement on Friday, the United Patriots urged for measures which  will ensure public order. On behalf the group Milen Mihov said that the  tensions in Assenovgrad were provoked "by the outrageous deeds of an  arrogant group of Gypsies who attacked with poles, stones and shovels  Bulgarian children". "This blatant act is a consequence of a nearly  30-year long  State policy to tolerate the crimes and give limitless  rights to this ethnic group without imposing any obligations. Tolerance  for any crimes today will explode tomorrow just as we see it in Europe,"  he warned.
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