Not
many motorbike groups can claim to have a head of state as
a supporter, but the case of Russia's Night Wolves is an exception.
President Vladimir Putin has publicly embraced the group, and after Russia's annexation of
Crimea last year, the Night Wolves were quick to parade through Crimea's
streets.
Their next ride, however, will be less trouble-free.
After the group announced that it was planning a ride through Europe to
celebrate the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, Poland denied the
bikers access to the country. Many eastern Europeans saw something else in the
ride: a ridiculing of the victims of the Russian-backed separatists in eastern
Ukraine.
Originally, the group wanted to travel from Russia to
Berlin, passing through Belarus, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia and
Austria and imitating the conquest of the Soviet Union from more than half a
century ago, according to AFP. Rally organizer Andrei Bobrovsky told the French
news agency that the main goal of the trip was "to pay respect to those
killed on WWII battlefields in the struggle against Hitler's Nazis."
On
Friday, Poland's foreign ministry justified their decision by saying that the
group failed to provide the required information on the ride in time.
Russia's foreign ministry reacted with outrage, calling the justification an
"outward lie."
"The necessary information has been provided
fully and on time," the ministry said in a statement. "The
decision has political undertones."
There may be some truth to the Russian foreign
ministry's claims. Last week, Polish Prime Minister Ewa Kopacz called the rally a "provocation" and
pointed to the fact that the group's leadership had openly supported the
Russian military involvement in Crimea and eastern Ukraine.
The Night Wolves have certainly evolved since their
formation. In its early days in the 1980s, the group was focused on
organizing rock concerts. As its size and influence grew, its leader,
With
more than 5,000 members, the Night Wolves has become an influential
voice in Russian politics. "Fiercely patriotic, they believe that wherever
the Night Wolves are, that should be considered Russia," the British
Telegraph described the group in 2014.
The paper also described an incident in which Putin
was hours late for a meeting with former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych
after having been on a tour with the bikers for a bit too long.
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