Posts Tagged ‘Ukraine’

Racism charges detract from Euro 2012 soccer in Poland, Ukraine

Sunday, June 10th, 2012

All was not well in Poland and Ukraine, co-hosts of Euro 2012, when the planet’s second-most-important soccer tournament kicked off Friday. And that could prove to be both good and bad thing as the sport moves toward World Cups scheduled in Brazil, Russia and Qatar over the next 10 years.

It’s a bad thing because, in the run-up to Euro 2012, attention has been focused away from the playing field because of charges of racism, anti-Semitism, homophobia and worries about violence in the host countries.

But that’s also a good thing because that focus has resulted in international condemnation and embarrassment, much of it aimed at Ukraine.

The French government said its officials will stay away from matches in the former Soviet republic, where France opens group play Monday, and the European Commission said all 27 European Union commissioners would also boycott if Ukraine opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko remained in prison on allegedly trumped-up charges. They have been joined by European Parliament President Martin Schulz, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt. And the BritishForeign Office announced Thursday its officials would remain home as well, following the lead of Germany and France.

Yet that may be the least of the problems surrounding the tournament, the largest sporting event to take place in Eastern Europe since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Almost since the Euro 2012 tournament was awarded to Ukraine in 2007, there have been widely voiced concerns about sex trafficking, aggressive and corrupt police, human rights problems and the expenditure of more than $13 billion to stage the event.

And that was before a recently aired British documentary that featured soccer fans from Poland and Ukraine displaying racist and anti-Semitic attitudes that included the vicious beating of Asian and dark-skinned fans.

“There is no question we are worried about this tournament more than any other,” Piara Powar, director of Football Against Racism in Europe (FARE) told reporters Wednesday in Warsaw.

Patience has run out among the players, too, with Italy’s Mario Balotelli, who is of Ghanaian descent, promising to take matters into his own hands if the hooligans target him.

“I will not accept racism at all,” Balotelli, who was once pelted by bananas in a Rome bar, told reporters. “If someone throws a banana at me in the street, I will go to jail because I will kill them.”

Racism has long been an ugly part of European soccer — often spilling onto the pitch. In July John Terry, twice captain of the English national team, is scheduled to stand trial for racially abusing an opponent. And he’ll be playing in Euro 2012 on an English team that is one-third black.

But though discrimination has declined some at the club level — partly because highly regarded teams such as Chelsea, Barcelona and Manchester United are fielding racially and ethnically diverse teams — competitions between countries often play into the stereotypes and xenophobia of the most nationalistic fans.

At a news conference Wednesday, UEFA President Michel Platini said referees will stop Euro matches if players become the targets of fan abuse. “There is more and more nationalism in Europe,” he said. “You can feel this at a number of matches. There are some worries. Some big worries.”

Platini is also partly responsible for creating this problem, though, because he presided over the UEFA meeting in which the tournament was awarded to Poland and Ukraine.

So what does all this have to do with World Cups scheduled in Brazil, Russia and Qatar? Well the hope is that those three countries watch and learn from the painful lessons of Ukraine.

This was supposed to be the East Bloc’s coming-out party, one that burnished its image and welcomed it into the community of nations as a full partner. Instead it’s turned into a costly embarrassment that could further isolate the region.

Soon that bright spotlight will turn to Brazil, where the World Cup will kick off in 2014 and theOlympic Games in 2016. And there are concerns the country won’t be ready for its close-up. Stadium construction and infrastructure improvements have been hampered by work stoppages and strikes while costs have soared well over budget, leading some to fear the worst.

Meanwhile, Russia, which will host the 2018 World Cup, could face some of the same problems as Ukraine in terms of racism and political repression. Qatar, awarded the 2022 World Cup, and the only Middle Eastern nation to stage the tournament, is governed under Islamic law and has a human rights record that has been widely criticized.

FIFA and UEFA, the world’s two most powerful governing bodies for soccer, argue that by taking major tournaments to new places they are opening those countries up to the outside world — a not-altogether altruistic gesture given the money both groups earn from the events.

On the eve of Euro 2012, however, neither Poland nor Ukraine appeared ready for openness. Here’s hoping that Brazil, Russia and Qatar don’t make the same mistake.

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Ukraine ambassador accuses BBC of bias over Euro 2012 racism claims

Friday, June 8th, 2012

ambassador to the UK has dubbed a Panorama programme on racism in Ukraine “biased and unfair” and said he regrets the British government’s Euro 2012 group stage boycott.

Speaking hours before the Euro 2012 football championship officially kicks off on Friday, Volodymyr Khandogiy acknowledged there were “instances” of racist abuse by Ukrainian fans. But he said the portrait painted by the BBC programme, Euro 2012: Stadiums of Hate, screened last week, was wrong.

“We do have instances of bad behaviour, intolerable behaviour, including [racial abuse] on the ground,” he told BBC Radio 4‘s Today programme. “But still they are instances. We are prepared to investigate and to get to the bottom of these instances rather than to generalise about racism in Ukraine.”

The programme showed fans beating up a group of Asian supporters at an end of league match in the eastern city of Kharkiv.

There was also footage of fans flashing Nazi salutes. The graphic scenes prompted the former England defender Sol Campbell to urge black England supporters to avoid the tournament, warning that they might return from Euro 2012 “in a coffin”.

The spectre of racism at the tournament returned on Friday after it emerged that black players in the Holland squad were subjected to monkey chants during an open practice session in the Polish city of Krakow, where the England team is based. The Polish city’s home team, Wislaw Krakow, featured in Panorama’s investigation, with apparent antisemitic chants.

The ambassador’s accusation of BBC bias follows the announcement on Thursday that UK ministers will boycott England’s three group-stage matches in Ukraine because of concerns over “selective justice and the rule of law” in the post-Soviet country. The Foreign Office’s decision is in protest at the treatment of Yulia Tymoshenko, Ukraine’s former prime minister and opposition leader, now in jail.

Khandogiy said he regretted the decision to stay away from England’s qualifying matches and noted that ministers had also said they were tied up with Olympic preparations. England plays France on Monday in the eastern city of Donetsk. There will be no official British presence at England’s two other group stage games, against Sweden on 15 June in Kiev, and against the hosts Ukraine in Donetsk on 19 June.

He said: “There are plenty of opportunities and fora and formats where we can discuss these issues, in the Council of Europe, the EU and bilaterally. We are ready to continue these discussions and to accept criticism. But we would like to put our perspective on these issues also.” He continued: “The reason for not attending I don’t understand, since I believe that sport and politics, they don’t mix.” Khandogiy also said Tymoshenko’s case was still “in the judicial domain” and “isn’t over, by the way”.

Tymoshenko was jailed for seven years last October after what her supporters say was a politically motivated show trial. Ukraine’s president, Viktor Yanukovych, has refused to release her, despite weeks of intense EU pressure. An appeal against her conviction has been delayed until 26 June, towards the end of Euro 2012.

In April Tymoshenko staged a hunger strike after photos appeared showing bruises on her body. She claims prison guards assaulted her and punched her in the stomach while transferring her from jail to hospital. Ukrainian prosecutors said her injuries were self-inflicted.

She is currently being held in Kharkiv, in eastern Ukraine, where her condition is being monitored by German doctors. The city is the venue for Germany’s first group stage match against the Netherlands on 13 June.

Several EU countries, led by Germany, have already announced they will not be attending games in Ukraine. Last month the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, said that she and her cabinet would not got to any German games played in Ukraine, which is co-hosting the tournament with Poland, unless the human rights situation under Yanukovych improved.

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Euro 2012: don’t boycott Ukraine

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Euro 2012 is almost upon us. For those just joining us from outer space, it will take place in Poland and Ukraine – both first-time hosts. As an English-language writer who was born in Ukraine, I have been receiving messages from football fans who are having second thoughts about travelling to the country of my birth for the tournament. “I’ve got everything booked,” one message reads. “But do you think Ukraine is safe for foreigners?”

 

In recent weeks, we have heard much talk about a boycott of Ukraine during the tournament – from such people as the foreign secretary,William Hague, and the German chancellor, Angela Merkel – inspired mainly by the jailing of the former prime minister, Yulia Tymoshenko, and furthered by general concerns over rule of law in the country. And since racist attacks in Ukraine are also not unheard of, the UK Foreign Office advises British travellers to Ukraine to “take extra care” if they are of Asian or African-Caribbean descent, or belonging to a religious minority group.

 

I’ve written extensively about other social problems and crime in Ukraine, including recent coverage of a horrific rape and murder that prompted mass protests in the country. You’d think I’d be the first to say, “Ukraine is not worth it.” But I would be lying.

 

What intrigued me most about calls to boycott Euro 2012 in Ukraine was the fact that there was no high-profile drive to boycott the recent Eurovision song contest held in Azerbaijan – and it’s not as if human rights abuses in Azerbaijan are something to speak of lightly. Azerbaijan is an authoritarian country, something that Ukraine is simply not (for one thing, Ukraine is too divided and diverse to be truly authoritarian). Did it come down to the fact that Azerbaijan has oil and Ukraine does not? Or is a major football tournament seen as a bigger deal than a few days of bad pop music? Either way, I have found myself feeling defensive over the implicit suggestion that Azerbaijan was perfectly fine to visit, while Ukraine is not.

 

As someone who comes to Ukraine often, and used to do so while accompanied by my Arab ex-boyfriend, I can personally attest to the fact that safety for foreigners in the country has improved. For one thing, racism in particular is no longer swept under the rug – there have been mass campaigns drawing attention to the problem, and a major drive to make skinheads feel unwelcome. Law-enforcement officials are keenly aware of the possibility of scandal. My source in the Ukrainian police told me this week: “People being picked up by the police for crimes are being told that should they cause any trouble during the tournament, there will be hell to pay. And officers themselves are being cautioned to think twice about harassing foreigners.”

 

It may be that during Euro 2012, Ukraine will be a safer place for foreigners than for citizens. As a friend of mine who is a former prosecutor told me this week: “Some parents are worried that their children will fall prey to foreign sex-tourists during the tournament! As you can see, these kinds of safety concerns can go both ways. But Kiev is ready for the fans, the city is spruced up, and I think all will turn out well.”

 

Ukraine is much more than the sum of the headlines. The football tradition there is long and proud, but even if you take sport out of the question, the country is well worth a visit. There is a well-developed eco-tourism industry in the west of the country, for example. And Kiev is a treasure trove of church architecture and shady courtyards, and does not yet have the sleek look and feel of the well-trod tourist destination.

 

As for me, I like to go down to the beach in Crimea’s remote Lisya Bukhta, or Fox Bay, when given half the chance. A gathering place of hippies, nudists and other representatives of Ukraine’s oft-neglected, yet thriving counter-culture movement, the scenic Lisya Bukhta represents, perhaps, what’s best about the country today: a kind of fleeting informality, a point in space and time where day-to-day life remains unpredictable and very beautiful. And yes, I’m sure the bars down there will broadcast football matches live.

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The Battles in the East

Sunday, May 13th, 2012

In reviewing the present state of the battles in the East, which have been going on for the past two months, we must put our strategy in the foreground. This is not “hold our position,” but rather: “No breakthroughs,” “do not allow an opening to Soviet agricultural regions,” and “destroy as many enemy troops, weapons, and war matériel as possible.”

Our tactics are governed by the knowledge that the desperate Bolshevist offensive is the result not of careful and considered planning, but rather gives all the signs of a nervous and worried manner of war leadership, which therefore displays ruthlessness, brutality, and murderous methods. Stalin and his lackeys no longer care if the millions of soldiers they have already lost are replaced in the shortest possible time by unimaginable masses of new victims for slaughter. Their goal is to keep going, whatever the cost. They pay no heed to the cost, whether in people or matériel, weapons or machines.

The number of tanks we have destroyed in recent weeks as of 1 September was 14.095, the number of aircraft 5,712, of weapons destroyed or captured, 2,450. We also captured 72,555 troops.

The total of those captured is but a small percentage of Soviet deaths. This is of decisive significance in our present battle. It makes no difference if we hold or give up a particular area or give up useless land to prevent a dangerous breakthrough. On average, our front in the East is 1,000 to 1,500 kilometers from our eastern border (including the Generalgouvernement). We hold the territory that is the agricultural heartland of the Soviet Union, and also hold areas critical to the Soviet war leadership.

The English weekly Statist discussed the Soviet Union’s war economy in its 7 August issue:

“To keep the military events in the east in the proper perspective, it is essential to remember the losses the Soviets have suffered over the past two years. They surrendered vast territories, invaluable war materials, factories, agricultural regions, people, and transportation lines. Now that it is possible to consider the German advance objectively, it must be granted that losses to such an extent must necessary lead to the economic collapse of Soviet Russia.

Fifty million people alone have been lost in the regions captured by the Germans. That has visible impact on economic and industrial production. The Soviet Union has lost 15 million hectares, more than a third of the its entire agricultural land. They also most over 35 millions tons of corn, and a third of their pre-war production of wheat.

The industrial losses the Soviet Union has suffered are even worse. According to reliable estimates, the occupation of the Ukraine and the Donetz Basin alone cost them over 50% of prewar coal production, 60% of iron ore, iron production, steel and rolled iron, and about a third of its production of machinery. The Ukraine formerly provided 60% of the Russian supply of aluminum, which is critical for modern industrial production.

The Soviet Union’s new factories behind the Urals cannot begin to cover these losses. The remain coal and steel center is 2,500 kilometers from the central front, and is therefore of no great help. The result is a continuing shortage of coal in the Ural area. And the new economic facilities behind the Urals suffer from insufficient electrical generating plants.”

This detailed report from an English magazine is confirmed by many recent enemy statements about the food situation. A Turkish newspaper recently interviewed a traveler from Kuibyschew about the conditions in that area, and reported that the population still depends on bad bread and water. Bread was no longer available every day. Even Soviet soldiers, who until last winter were relatively well fed and clothed, now give a rather forlorn and unhappy impression.

The Edinburgh newspaper Scotsman, at the end of a discussion of American Lend Lease aid for the second quarter of 1943:

The Soviet Union has not produced enough foodstuffs to cover its own needs for a long time. The food supplies from the United States to the Soviet Union are not enough to cover the shortages.

As a result, civilian rations are far too small. Even favored industrial workers get less than two pounds of meat a month. In large cities, there is no milk, and butter is available only rarely.

An English pilot, recently returned from the Soviet Union, told similar things to the English newspaper Daily Express. Among other things, he reported that the old and those to weak to work no longer receive meat or other essential foodstuffs. All they get is dried bread, about 200 grams a day.

This Englishman further reported that 67% of factory workers in the Soviet Union are women and 25% boys between 14 and 18. On average, only 8% are men.

The resulting impact on the Soviet civilian population is reported by Watson Jones, another English reporter returning from the Soviet Union. In the English British Medical Journal, he reported:

The life of Moscow’s population is so drab and poor that it overshadows everything else. The faces of people on the street are expressionless and hopeless.

The population goes out in torn clothing and bad shoes. The people’s suffering is written in their faces.”

Just as in the past, the Bolshevist system is trying to conceal the true cause of its people’s vast misery, which is the result of its policies, through brutal waves of murder and terror, keeping people afraid and terrified, and thereby passive. On 2 September, Moscow radio strongly criticized Soviet collective farms. It accused the leaders and the enslaved forced laborers of inadequate efforts and insufficient enthusiasm. That is doubtless the beginning of one of the notorious Soviet “cleansing actions” that the new Soviet terror organization, the NKVD, will take up now that the GPU had to be eliminated when it became too notorious, as had the Cheka before it.

As a result of the desperate Soviet situation, admitted even by its allies, the Western plutocrats have sung Stalin’s praises even more loudly than before. He is demanding that the English and Americans take action to finally relieve the hard fighting in the east. The Soviets view terror attacks by English and American flyers on German civilians as wholly inadequate.

A series of articles and commentaries in Soviet newspapers has made this particularly clear. The News Chronicle recently reviewed Bolshevist thinking, and stated:

“It is entirely understandable that Soviet demands for a second front are growing more impatient every day. Bolshevist losses are terrible. The Soviets accuse us (the English and Americans) of planning precise field campaigns and experimenting with bombing, while the Soviet Union bleeds to death.”

English military commentator Cyrill Falls agrees with Russia’s call for a second front, and wrote:

Both from the moral and material standpoints, the Western Allies owe it to the Soviet Union to make greater war efforts. It is senseless to ask the Soviets to see things through British-American eyes. The operations in the east are costing the Soviets enormous sacrifices and losses. The Germans are mounting a powerful defense, and one has to grant that German soldiers are the best in the world. As a result, German resistance is extraordinarily strong, perhaps unbreakable. Under these conditions, Soviet calls for a second front are entirely justified.”

The News Chronicle has particularly close relations to the Soviet embassy in London. In its issue of 24 August, it considered relations with the Soviet Union in depth, saying among other things:

“One has to grant that the British-American side has little to say about the Soviet standpoint. For two years, the Soviet army has born almost the full brunt of the land battle in Europe. It is still fighting, but its losses have grown to gigantic size. The Soviet Union therefore constantly demands a second front in order to defeat Germany in 1943. If that does not happen, the Soviet Union sees no hope for the future. But how have England and America answered thus far?

1. With Africa, 2. with Sicily, 3. with air attacks on German civilians, and 4. with war shipments to the Soviet Union. This may be fine if one is playing chess, but it is not the right way to wage war. With regards to the Soviet Union, one cannot ignore the fact that time no longer favors the Allies.

The Soviet Union’s losses are so great that even the Soviets believe that they will bleed to death while the Allies play at war. What good will it do to launch the perfect field campaign in 1944 if the Soviet Union is no longer able to wage offensive war?”

From all these reports, two things are clear:

1. The Soviets themselves see no way, given current conditions, to break through the German front and secure the agricultural land they need.

2. Growing Soviet desperation leads them to demand effective military support from the Western Allies. They, however, hold back from any effective and decisive intervention in the face of German preparedness. They pretend that their tactical and military actions have great significance, whereas in the more realistic view of the Soviets, the Anglo-American war effort is meaningless and insignificant.

Recently, England and America have countered impatient Soviet demands with criticism of the results of the current Soviet offensive, already in progress for more than eight weeks. Radio and press reports in both countries have said that “So far, there have been no dramatic breakthroughs,” certainly not in proportion to the huge losses in men and matériel.

A lead article in the Daily Express on 2 September said:

“Even if the Soviets succeed in gaining small amounts of territory, the price is far too high. In view of the determined German resistance, there have been no quick and speedy withdrawals anywhere along the long front. Each mile demands hard battle. These difficulties are caused not only by the battles themselves, but also by the extraordinarily bad communication lines to the rear, since the Germans destroy or render unusable everything that they give up, in particular all the railway lines and roads.”

The neutral world, too, has clearly recognized that the determined German defensive battle in the East must be viewed as a complete and total German victory. The Bulgarian newspaper Novo Vreme writes:

“Soviet mass attacks have allowed the German military leadership to use a strategy of flexible defense that preserves its own forces while costing the greatest possible losses to the enemy. This strategy is extraordinarily successful, as the huge Bolshevist losses in troops, tanks, aircraft, weapons, etc., proves. The minor territorial gains that the Soviets have made, on the other hand, are completely insignificant. What is important is that the Soviets have not succeeded even once in breaking the German front and forcing German troops to retreat. Each German withdrawal is planned, following a carefully prepared and intentional decision.”

The Observer sees the result of the battle in this way:

“In at most five to six weeks, the notorious Russian fall will bring a halt to all major operations on the Eastern Front. It cannot be expected that the Soviets by then will have had any kind of decisive success.”

This overview, based on a selection from many enemy and neutral voices, allows us to evaluate the situation clearly. The situation, in fact, is as we described at the beginning. The goal of German operations in the East is:To stop the Soviets from breaking through the German front and thereby gaining access to the Ukrainian harvest. Up until now, this goal has been fully attained.

The Exchange Telegraph summarized the situation in these words:

“We cannot expect that the war will end with a breakthrough along the German front, or one back in the Reich itself. Hitler has held on to the old striking force, and hard and costly battles still awit us.”

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OHLENDORF, OTTO

Monday, May 7th, 2012

(1908-1951) Highly educated lawyer, economist, and head of Amt III (Security Service) of the Reich Main Security Office. As Commander of Einsatzgruppe D he was responsible for organizing the mass murders of more than 90,000 people in the southern Ukraine (1941-42). Sentenced to death at Nuremberg in 1948, he served three years imprisonment before being hanged with three other Einsatzgruppen commanders, in Landsberg prison on June 8, 1951.

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Kiev attack on Jew may not be anti-Semitic

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

Israel‘s Ambassador to the Ukraine Reuven Daniel visited the Kiev hospital where 25-year-old yeshiva student Passover holiday.

 

The ambassador asked that people not rush to conclusions over the motive of the attack and added that he had spoken with the victim’s mother, Natalya: “She is weeping and is extremely concerned. I tried to calm her down as much as I could and told her we would help in any way she needs.”

 
ליד מיטתו של אלכסנדר בקייב (צילום: זק"א קייב)

Aharon’s bedside at the Kiev hospital (Photo: ZAKA Kiev)

 

“Aharon’s condition is grave, he is unconscious as a result of the beating he received,” the ambassador told Ynet. The ambassador noted that until the police investigation is concluded, there is no way to determine that the incident was motivated by racial hate and anti-Semitism.

“The incident was immediately interpreted as an anti-Semitic act, and that is the most accepted and ‘sexy’ explanation, but after hearing all the details – with honesty and complete objectivity – there may be many explanations behind this (attack).”

 

The ambassador stressed that should it become clear that the incident was racially motivated he will act in every way possible to make sure incidents like this one do not repeat themselves.

 

“The only thing I can say is that police must investigate and will do so in response to our personal and official requests. I think we can ensure the swiftness and integrity of the investigation. Things cannot be swept under the table. I will do everything in my ability to bring the responsible to justice.”

 

The local Jewish community had claimed earlier that the assault was racially motivated, but according to Yaakov Zilberman, director of the Jewish community in Kiev, the police are reluctant to investigate the crime as an anti-Semitic one are trying to cover it up.

 

Ukraine’s Chief Rabbi Moshe Asman told Ynet that, “We will not rest until the assailants are found and brought to justice.”

 

The Jewish community in Kiev has reportedly alerted authorities to a group of skinheads that have made threats against its members.

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Ukranian manufacturer preparing to sell Adolf Hitler dolls

Saturday, March 24th, 2012

News reports are claiming that dolls depicting former Nazi leader Adolf Hitler will go on sale in Ukraine. These reports cite Ukraine’s Zerkalo Tizhden newspaper which reported that a toy manufacturer would release the line of Hitler dolls in the summer.

The 40cm doll will reportedly first be available in Kiev with a £100 (GBP) price tag and comes with a large range of accessories in a presentation box with the dates of Hitler’s birth and death.

Nazis images are illegal in Ukraine, with positive portrayal specifically banned. However, there are allegations that right-wing nationalist politics are gaining strength in the country and that xenophobia and racism are on the rise, including some said to be comparable to that present in Germany under Nazi rule. Fascism and propaganda are also banned.

When the former Soviet Union, including Ukraine, was invaded by Germany under Hitler’s rule 2-3 million Ukrainians were among the casualties, of which 1.5 million were Jews.

Adolf can be dressed in various guises, including “early days Adolf”, which consists of a brown shirt and jodhpurs, and “Wartime Adolf”, which features a grey tunic, black trousers and the Iron Cross medal. The doll also comes with boots and shoes, caps, gloves, full uniforms, cane and belt which can be placed on Hitler, whose arms move, allowing the doll to replicate the famed salute of its real life counterpart.

Also included is a model of Blondi, Hitler’s female German Shepherd, who was exceedingly loyal to Hitler. Hitler poisoned Blondi with cyanide in 1945 at the same time as taking his own life in his bunker at Berlin.

“It is like Barbie. Kids can undress fuhrer, pin on medals and there’s a spare head in the kit to give him a kinder expression on his face. He has glasses that are round, in the manner of pacifist John Lennon,” said one saleswoman. The company, which will release the dolls in Summer, says that if demand is high a range of toys themed on the Third Reich may be released, to include barracks, working models of crematoriums and gas chambers, concentration camps and interior models of the chancellery.

The doll is not set to be released until the summer, but BBC News Online has footage suggesting that some stores are selling the doll already.

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