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Published: 19:53 BST, 27 July 2013 | Updated: 21:38 BST, 29 July 2013
A Russian neo-Nazi group is allegedly torturing homosexual youths by using a social network to find them.
The campaigns, called ‘Occupy Pedophilyaj’ and ‘Ocuppy Gerontilyaj’, have been launched by former skinhead Maxim Martsinkevich, according to an LGBT rights group.
The Spectrum Human Rights Alliance (SHRA) alleges that the group claims to identify and report paedophiles but instead use it to target teenager who reply to same-sex personal adverts.
This Facebook picture reportedly shows a Russian neo-Nazi group that attacks gay teenage boys who they find online
This video appears to show masked youths accosting a nervous teenage boy in Moscow, asking if he has come to meet 'Uncle Dima'
The boy admits that he is there to meet a man for sex to the men gathered around him in the video
Adverts are posted on the Russian equivalent to Facebook, VK.com, reports The Huffington post.
The group allegedly agrees to meet the boy for a date, but then films him being bullied and tortured.
SHRA writes on their website: ‘These self-proclaimed 'crime fighters' perform their actions under the broad day light, often outside and clearly visible to general public that indifferently passes by or even commend them.
‘Video recordings of bullying and tortures are freely distributed on the Internet in order to out LGBT teens to their respective schools, parents and friends. Many victims were driven to suicides, the rest are deeply traumatized.’ 
Under duress, the 15-year-old tells them his personal details
It is believed that the homophobic group found the teenager through Russian social network VK.com by looking through the same-sex adverts
The LGBT group has pointed to a video on YouTube allegedly showing a group of masked youths interrogating a nervous looking 15-year-old in a housing estate.
During the video, according to a translation by The Huffington Post , the group asks him if he is there to meet ‘Uncle Dima’.
The boy admits that he is there to have sex, he admits his sexual preferences and gives all of his details.
He tells the group who he is, where he is from, what school he goes to and his age.
At the end of the video, one member of the group urinates into a bottle and attempts to pour it over his head, and another kicks him. Then it cuts out.
Russian online newspaper Lenta met with some people who have joined the ‘Occupy Pedofilyaj’ campaign earlier this month.
One member allegedly said: ‘We do not like homosexuals. If it was up to me, I'd kill them but the government doesn't allow that.’
The boy apppeard to be interrogated while being pursued around a housing compound
The group of men recorded the incident on camera as they bullied the gay teenager
The threatening group surrounded the boy as they taunted him and attempted to spray him with urine before the video cuts out
He then said that all gay men are paedophiles, adding that they should not be allowed in society.
Earlier this month Vladimir Putin signed into law the homosexual propaganda bill, making it illegal to share information with minors that may make encourage the idea that homosexual relationships are ‘socially equivalent’ to a heterosexual couple.
Just last month a 23-year-old gay man was tortured to death in the Russian city of Volgograd.
He was sodomised with beer bottles, suffered injuries to his genitalia and was battered to death.
The comments below have been moderated in advance.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of MailOnline.

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Published by Associated Newspapers Ltd
Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group


Russian Red Army recruits undergo humiliating naked exams in astonishing photos
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A terrifying bust of tyrant Josef Stalin looms in the background of one photo as a naked man stands before a table of Red Army officers
Astonishing black-and-white photos have surfaced showing naked recruits undergoing medical exams before joining Joseph Stalin's Red Army.
In one snap, a naked man stands before a table of officers as they inspect him for any abnormalities - as a terrifying bust of Stalin glares over them all.
The year is 1930 and the man has been drafted into the Red Army to fight for the USSR.
Next to Stalin's unsightly head a poster reads: "The most important basis of our army is that it is the army of liberation of the Working and the Peasants, it is the army of October Revolution, the army of the dictatorship of the proletariat."
The chilling images of young Russian men being medically examined were taken after they had been conscripted to fight for the Red Army.
The pictures show nervous-looking men being eyeballed by officers and nurses to check their physical condition.
In military registration and enlistment offices, doctors and nurses can be seen carrying out medical tests such as weighing, measuring and listening for a heartbeat.
The images were taken between 1920 and 1940 as the Soviet top brass built their Red Army, officially known as the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army, pejoratively referred to as the Red Horde.
During World War II, the Red Army was perhaps the most decisive land force for the Allies that consisted of Britain, France and the US.
It was the Red Army that accounted for a whopping 80 per cent of casualties suffered to the Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS, and it was they who ultimately captured the Nazi German capital, Berlin.
Not to mention their invasion of Manchuria which contributed heavily to the unconditional surrender of Imperial Japan.
The Red Army was officially formed on January 28, 1918, and condition of entry was "the support of the coming Socialist Revolution in Europe".
Those early Soviet forces mainly consisted of peasants.
The families of those who served were guaranteed rations and assistance with farm work.
Because of this, recruitment centres were flooded with men and women trying to join up.
However, when the Soviet Union was formed they were at war with their enemies immediately so on the 23rd February 1918 they began drafting recruits.
It was christened Red Army Day and it is still a national holiday in Russia, now known as Defender of the Fatherland Day.
The Red Army went on to become a feared force in World War II, however not without its problems.
After Stalin rose to power in the 1920s he began purging officers leaving them hamstrung with inexperienced leaders.
In 1937, just two years before the start of the Second World War, Stalin dismissed over 11,000 officers and many other high-ranking army chiefs who he thought were enemies.
In 1946, the word "red" was removed from the name of the army, marking the end of an an era.
Stalin saw the Soviet Union through World War II and its post-war reconstruction and famine, and the beginnings of the Cold War.
After years of failing health, he died in March 1953 due to a cerebral haemorrhage.
His death is shrouded in mystery more than 60 years on.
There are still claims he may have been murdered, and possibly even poisoned with warfarin, a rat poison, in a bid to avert a war with the US.
It is estimated that the World War II fatalities of the Soviet Union was 27 million civilians and armed service members.
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Crimean summer: would you send your kids to the legendary Artek camp?
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the famous Artek summer camp disappeared from public view, and up until now many people, even in Russia itself, weren't aware whether it still existed. In August, we traveled to see the camp ourselves, and here's what we found out.
A group of kids approach as we arrive on the main square of the legendary Soviet summer camp, Artek. Dressed in the same colorful uniform, they greet us with a chant, "Artekovtsi! Our beloved Artek! Never will we forget!" and leave us to enjoy the hot and sunny afternoon in the picturesque southern coast of the Crimean peninsula. Over the next day and a half our group of journalists will see what became of the former Soviet pioneer camp that once had ten smaller camps (each with its own name: Khrustalny, Rechnoy, Lesnoy, Morskoy, etc.) and which attracted thousands of children from all over the world. Today, it looks like a five-star hotel, but let me start from the beginning.
In 2014-2017, the Russian government invested 10 billion rubles ($171 million) to revive the legendary camp. Today, its size is larger than Monaco (218 hectares in total, with 102 hectares of parks) and has two swimming pools, six dining halls, 15 sports grounds, three tennis courts, plus a climbing wall and a rope park, among other things. Out of ten camping complexes that comprised the original Artek complex, nine have been renovated and are operational. A state-funded institution, Artek recently received the special status of an innovation educational platform to test and implement new forms of teaching. There's even a year-round school on the premises that allows children to visit Artek during the academic year without missing classes. Around 2,000-3,500 children attend the school every three weeks, and 300 kids from the neighboring towns of Gurzuf and Yalta attend it on a regular basis. Just three years ago, however, the camp looked very different. In 2014, when Crimea was reunited with Russia, Artek was in a very poor state. "Everything was worn out and in desperate need of not just repair work, but overall reconstruction (…) Such a large camp is really expensive to maintain and Ukraine couldn't finance it, let alone develop it further," recalls Alexei Kasprzhak, the current director of Artek. Restoring this camp to its former glory became the main goal for the new Russian administration in Crimea.
Founded in 1925 as a health camp for children who suffered during the years of civil war, Artek gradually transformed into a year-round educational complex that never stopped working, even during World War II. In 1941-1945, the camp was evacuated to the Altai Region in Siberia where 200 children and staff helped local hospitals, and gathered metal for tanks and aircraft production. After the war, the damaged premises of Artek were rebuilt and the camp continued its work, welcoming not only Soviet children but also those from other countries, including Belgium, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden, Bulgaria, China, Korea, and Vietnam. The camp saw a number of high-level visitors: Clementine Churchill, the wife of Sir Winston Churchill, India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Indira Gandhi (not yet prime minister at that time), as well as Vietnamese Prime Minister Ho Chi Minh and first man in space Yuri Gagarin. In 1983, American schoolgirl and peace activist, Samantha Reed Smith, visited the camp at the invitation of Soviet leader Yuri Andropov.
Artek became a truly international place hosting festivals and welcoming representatives of fellow communist regimes. It grew to have its own traditions and values, and became a cult destination for many generations to come. Only the most talented children, who stood out in public life, sports, arts or at school, received the rare and highly-coveted vouchers that the authorities gave out free of charge.
"It was almost impossible to get into, and everyone dreamed about it," Irina, one of the lucky few to holiday in Artek in 1980, told RBTH. "My school got three vouchers and I received one of them for being such an excellent student. I was 12 and this was the first time I ever saw the sea and Crimea." Together with 33 others in her group, she hiked in nearby Ayu-Dag Mountain (also called Bear Mountain), went swimming and did many other activities, including classes in radio electronics. "I was too young back then and didn't keep in touch with those in my group," she recalls. "But Artek gave me a sense that I was part of something bigger and increased my self-esteem." After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 the camp came under Ukrainian control and slowly started to lose its grandeur. Campus buildings began to decay, local businessmen started to sell alcohol on Artek's premises, and carwashes appeared on the camp's territory. In 2009, for the first time in history Artek ceased work due to financial problems. Fortunately for the camp, in 2014 it got a new life.
Today, a 21-day stay in Artek is a reward for gifted children, just like in Soviet times. Children eight to 17 years old from any part of Russia can apply through an online system that started operating in 2017. The most outstanding candidates are chosen based on merit and achievements – whether in class, arts, sports or public life - and 95 percent of places are awarded free of charge, while the remaining five percent of places can be purchased (80,000 rubles, or $1,369). Everyone, however, must cover their travel expenses from home to Crimea's capital, Simferopol, where a bus takes the kids to Artek free of charge. Children from abroad can also come – they can apply online and pay for the trip themselves (the same 80,000 rubles, plus travel expenses to and from Simferopol); or get a free voucher by winning one of the international competitions organized by Artek's partners, such as: ● "LIVE CLASSICS" International Competition for Young Readers (organized by the Live Classics Fund) http://youngreaders.ru/ ● The Sputnik Russian National Contest of Young Engineers and Researchers (organized by the Russian State Space Corporation Roscosmos) http://www.roscosmos.ru/ ● Earth is Our Home Competition (organized by the International Camping Fellowship (ICF) http://www.campingfellowship.org ● Russian language international competition (organized by the Pushkin State Russian Language Institute) http://www.pushkin.institute/ ● The Commonwealth Artek International Festival of Children and Youth Creative Work (organized by Artek Fund) http://artekfond.ru/
adults work in Artek year-round, but in summer this number becomes larger.
rubles will be invested in Artek till 2020.
Children come from all over: the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), Austria, Argentina, Bulgaria, UK, Germany, Denmark, Israel, Spain, Italy, Canada, Qatar, Latvia, Lithuania, Mexico, Mongolia, the Netherlands, United Arab Emirates, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Slovakia, the U.S., Turkey, Finland, France, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, South Korea, Syria and even children from Ukraine and Georgia! By the way, Georgian government authorities recently reacted very negatively when they found out that a group of their schoolchildren had gone to Artek. The children and their teachers were invited to Artek after participating in a Russian language competition in Tbilisi, and still decided to go despite the current difficulties in Russian-Georgian relations. It's good to see such examples where children themselves rise above geopolitics in order to attend Artek.
While there are many obligatory activities, such as hiking on nearby Ayu-Dag Mountain, there are also optional activities that a child can choose. He or she might pursue something they are already good at, or try something new, for instance, eco-tourism, archeology, horse riding, sailing, nano technology or space engineering.
The opportunities are numerous and are often taught by professionals from the many well-known institutions and corporations that Artek cooperates with, including: ● Bauman Moscow State Technical University ● Russian State Space Corporation, Roscosmos ● Moscow Aviation Institute ● Russian National Sailing Federation ● Lomonosov Moscow State University's Faculty of Biology ● Russian Geographical Society ● Rossiya Segodnya media agency ● Agency for Strategic Initiatives ● Museum of Cosmonautics ● Russia's Emergency Ministry, and etc.
The majority of foreign children coming to Artek have at least some Russian language proficiency. They either learned Russian at home or have Russian relatives. So coming to Crimea is an opportunity to practice their Russian and explore the historical heritage of the peninsula, as well as make Russian friends. In some cases, when kids with no Russian language skills come to Artek, the staff does its best to provide a translator. But this is a temporary solution – Russian is the most used language at the camp so those who don't know it well enough will miss out on some part of the conversation. "We had five Chinese children in our camp, but they didn't try much to communicate with us," said Ivan, 15, from Moscow. "We were eager to make friends with them, but they preferred to focus on their smartphones and didn't mingle much."
8.00-8.30 wake up, morning bath, gymnastics 8.30-9.15 medical check-up 8.45 - 9.45 breakfast 9.45-12.00 swimming 12.00-12.45 free time, various activities 12.45-13.45 dinner 13.00-14.00 medical check-up 14.00-15.30 daytime break
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