Neo-Nazism

Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot

Nicknamed the "forbidden survey", it was crowdfunded by civic initiative 50dni.sk. (Meaning "50days", the name is a cheeky reference to a government proposal late last year to introduce a 50-day moratorium on polls, which was scuppered by the constitutional court.)

See also:

Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable

Kotleba: Slovak Extremist Who Made Far Right Fashionable

A priest from Trnava, a city 40 kilometres to the east, offered his blessing to Kotleba, his party and its supporters — intoning that they could "save our beloved country".

See also:

Slovak Far Right Courts Youth Vote in Pivotal Ballot

Slovak Democracy Seen at Stake in Make-or-Break Election

Don't Underestimate Slovakia's Neo-Nazi Threat

Neo-Nazi MEP penalized for tearing up Turkish flag

The European Parliament has penalized a Greek neo-Nazi lawmaker who tore up a paper copy of the Turkish flag during a debate in the Brussels-based assembly last month.
Yiannis Lagos, an independent MEP, was on Tuesday ordered to pay a fine of 2,261 euros, which was said to be the equivalent of his weekly paycheck.
He was also banned from the assembly for four days.

Ankara blasts Greek MEP for ripping Turkish flag at plenary

Turkey on Jan. 30 slammed Greek member of the European Parliament (EP) Ioannis Lagos for ripping a Turkish flag at the EP Plenary.

"These racist minds know better than anybody else how we broke the hands of and poured into the sea those who dare attack our glorious flag," Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu said in a tweet.

Greece denounces tearing up of Turkish flag by neo-Nazi MEP

Greece's Foreign Ministry condemned the actions of a neo-Nazi lawmaker who tore up a paper copy of the Turkish flag during a debate in the European Parliament on Wednesday evening.

Yannis Lagos is an independent MEP and leader of the National Popular Conscience, a splinter group that emerged after the disintegration of neo-Nazi Golden Dawn.

Pages