
Supporters of Ukrainian nationalist and far-right groups take part in a rally to mark Defender of Ukraine Day in Kiev, October 14, 2017. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich

Delegates sing the Ukrainian national anthem during the first congress of the new political party National Corps, created from the members of Azov civil corps and veterans of Azov regiment in Kiev on October 14, 2016. (GENYA SAVILOV/AFP/Getty Images)

Volunteers of the right-wing paramilitary Azov National Corps light flares during a rally in front of the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev, Ukraine, Monday, Nov. 26, 2018. Hundreds of protesters from far-right party National Corps waved flares at a protest in the snowy streets outside the Ukrainian parliament Monday. They brandished yellow-and-blue flags with the Ukrainian national symbol, the trident, and a huge white banner reading 'Don't back down!" . (AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky)

National Corps' local leader Serhii Filimonov speaking at a rally in Kiev, October 2018.Credit: Michael Colborne

Ukraine's National Militia marching in Kiev, December 2018.

Racists are welcome here" alongside the far-right acronym "Good Night Left Side" by the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, November 2018.Credit: Michael Colborne

A girl says goodbye to her boyfriend, a new volunteer recruit of the Ukrainian Azov battalion, a notorious fascist militia, after a military oath ceremony in Kiev in this 2014 file photo. Photo: Agence France-Presse

Activists and supporters of Ukrainian nationalist parties and members of the fascist Azov battalion rally in Kiev in 2016. Photo: EPA

The Azov Battalion uses the Nazi Wolfsangel symbol as its logo. Its founder Andriy Biletsky (center) has moved to ban “race mixing” in the Ukranian parliament. (Azov/Twitter)

This photo from Azov’s website shows an officer of the neo-Nazi militia armed with a version of Israel’s Tavor rifle. The Tavor is made under license from Israel by Ukraine’s national arms maker Fort.
I can keep going but I am getting bored.