Groups of Ukrainian ultra-nationalists marched through the streets of Odessa as the city mourned the victims of the 2014 massacre. Ukrainian Neo-Nazis were carrying the banners of right-wing groups and chanting extremist slogans.
On May 2, 2014, 48 people were killed and more than 250 injured during clashes between members of the notorious ‘Right Sector,’ which has its roots in Western Ukraine, and opponents of the Kiev Maidan, which had taken place a few months earlier.
The majority of the victims were burned alive or suffocated from smoke inhalation at the local House of Trade Unions, where they’d tried to hide from the nationalists. The Right Sector is suspected of having set the building on fire deliberately. However, seven years since the tragedy, Ukrainian investigators still haven’t identified the culprits.
On Saturday, numerous people assembled at the square in front of the House of Trade Unions to lay flowers and commemorate those who died. There was a heavy police presence in the area as well as elsewhere in the city, with additional officers reportedly deployed from the capital, Kiev.
The participants in the demonstration carried Ukrainian flags and the banners of extremist groups, including the Right Sector. Some in the crowd were sporting military-style uniforms, with others dressed in black and hid their faces behind balaclavas.
Forsided, 03.05.2021
Source: RT