Damir Zaynullin
Damir Tahir ulı Zaynullin (Russian: Дамир Тагирович Зайнуллин, Tatar: Cyrillic Дәмир Таһир улы Зайнуллин, Latin Dämir Tahir ulı Zaynullin ; ~ - 1 July 2007), was a 23-year-old Saint-Petersburg-born ethnic Tatar who was brutally murdered on July 1, 2007, by a gang of 17 people. Allegedly, the killers were Russian far-right skinheads.
On his way to work, he was killed at 79 Stachek Prospect, near Avtovo station of Saint Petersburg Metro; not far from police precinct number 31. Security cameras seem to indicate that 17 attackers were involved, one of them a young woman. The attackers first ripped open Zaynullin's belly to prevent him from running away, then beat him severely, and finally used a broken glass bottle to cut his arteries, causing him to bleed to death. Zaynullin was buried in the Southern Cemetery of Saint Petersburg, on 7 July 2007. Eight suspects had been arrested, but they were all released without charges. One suspect, Mariya Khapilina, gave herself up on 13 July 2007. Khapilina's father says that like the victim, she is of Tatar ethnicity.[1][2]
This deliberate assassination of a young man, who had graduated from the Agricultural University only a day before he was killed, was not even covered by the mainstream media in Saint Petersburg.[3] However, it took resonance in the Tatar and anti-fascist media, and is often seen as a racist attack.[4][5] Many anti-fascist and Tatar groups, including the All-Tatar Public Center, state that Zaynullin was killed as a result of an ultra-nationalist attack.
Footnotes
- ↑ (Russian) Молодёжь Татарстана. Смуглые времена moltat.ru / Избранные публикации "МТ" / Эксклюзив / №28 от 20 июля 2007 года /
- ↑ (Russian) АПН Северо-Запад Татарский оскал русского фашизма
- ↑ The St. Petersburg Times. Gang of 17 Kills Tatar In Attack // Galina Stolyarova
- ↑ July 13, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- The Tatar community in St. Petersburg says a young man who was murdered in early July was the victim of a racist attack.
- ↑ UCSJ: Neo-Nazis Murder St. Petersburg Student
External links
- Blog devoted to Damir Zaynullin (Russian)
- Vil Mirzayanov's speech on Damir Zaynullin's assassination on YouTube (Tatar)
- An article about Damir Zaynullin in St.Petersburg Times (English)
- Article by IMA-Press (Russian)
- Article in Regnum (Russian)