Mindaugas Murza
Template:Short description Mindaugas Gervaldas (né Murza; born 16 December, 1973) is a Lithuanian radical nationalist and a Neo-Nazi. He was a member of the Lithuanian National Defence Volunteer Forces. He has been a member, founder, and chairman of several different Neo-Nazi political parties. Only one party, the National Democratic Party of Lithuania, was officially registered and participated in the 2003 municipal elections. Murza and three others were elected to the council of the Šiauliai City Municipality.
Political ventures
In 1993, members of the Lithuanian National Defence Volunteer Forces (SKAT) founded the underground Lithuanian National Independence Union (Template:Langx or LNNS).[1] Murza, then a SKAT sergeant, became leader of LNNS in December 1993. The organization established a combat group and sought to collect weapons for about 30 men who would be "efficient fighters" and "not afraid to die". Murza's home was searched in 1995 and in February 1996 he was sentenced to 18 months of correctional labor without imprisonment for illegal possession of small caliber ammunition.[1]
In November 1996, Murza became chairman of the newly established Lithuanian Alliance of Nationalist-Socialist Unity (Script error: No such module "Lang". or LNSVS).[1] It was the first Neo-Nazi organization in Lithuania.[2] In 1998, Murza and other members of LNSVS in their publications Voice of the Nation (Script error: No such module "Lang".) attacked Lithuania's minorities of Jews, Poles and Russians, and demanded that conditions for these minorities be made so unbearable so that they would leave Lithuania.[3] In total, 17 issues of Voice of the Nation were published.[1] LNSVS attempted to register as a political party twice and as a non-governmental organization ten times, but was rejected by the Ministry of Justice due to its propagation of hate.[1] In October 1999, LNSVS was reorganized into the Lithuanian National Labor Union (Script error: No such module "Lang". or LTDS).[4] It was officially registered not as a political party but as a non-governmental organization.[5]
Murza continued to search for ways to legalize his political activities.[1] In May 2000, Murza became chairman of the newly established Lithuanian National Socialist Party (Script error: No such module "Lang". or LNSP).[6] In 2001, he attempted to revive the moribund Life Logic Party of Lithuania (Script error: No such module "Lang".) when the registration for LNSP was refused.[1][7] In May 2001, LNSP merged into the legal National Democratic Party of Lithuania (Script error: No such module "Lang". or LNDP) then chaired by Kazimieras Uoka. It was a moderately nationalist party with no great political prospects that was the first to adopt Euroscepticism as its platform.[1] Murza became chairman of LNSP.[4] Murza and three other members of LNSP were elected to the council of the Šiauliai City Municipality in the 2003 municipal elections. Another member of LNSP was elected to the council of the Alytus City Municipality.[8]
In April 2005, Murza presented plans to establish a new political party, the Template:Ill (Script error: No such module "Lang". or VLNDS). At the meeting of the new party, Murza made openly anti-Semitic statements calling Jews "the most cruel and crafty enemy of the European race" which led to Lithuanian prosecutors launching an investigation against him for preaching hatred.[9] Murza resigned from LNDP in December 2006 and established VLNDS in February 2007.[4] VLNDS adopted a stylized swastika as its symbol and openly promoted the Neo-Nazi platform – anti-Semitism, anti-immigration, anti-gay rights.[10]
In March 2011, Murza established a new party, the Template:Ill (Script error: No such module "Lang". or LITAS).[4] In 2012, Murza officially changed his last name to Gervaldas (from geras [good] and valdyti [to rule]). It describes the new ideal political system that was added to the political program of VLNDS.[11] In 2014, Murza organized a 19-member Public Electoral Committee "Against Corruption" that ran in the municipal elections in the Šiauliai City Municipality and received only 324 votes.[12]
Murza and his supporters organize various small protests.[13] In 2001, he organized a protest against mayor of Šiauliai without a permit. When he refused to pay the fine, his car (Volkswagen Golf) was confiscated by the government.[14] In November 2006, Murza and six others were found guilty of interrupting a religious ceremony when they harassed Jews lighting a menorah in December 2003. Murza was fined 5,000 litas.[15] In 2010, Murza participated in a protest against the Baltic Pride parade in Vilnius.[16]
Personal life
On 19 November 2011, he married Russian citizen Zlata Rapova who claims to be a descendant of Count Jean Rapp, French general during the Napoleonic Wars. The marriage ceremony was conducted according to neo-pagan traditions.[17]
References
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