30. Januar 2012
On Saturday, 29 October 2011, the Workers' Social Justice Party (Dělnická strana sociální spravedlnosti - DSSS) held an anti-Romani demonstration in Rotava (Sokolov district) together with neo-Nazis from Germany. The DSSS has itself been infiltrated by neo-Nazis, including its cells in the Karlovy Vary region.
One section of Rotava, a small town on the border between the Czech Republic and Germany, is generally considered to have the most socially excluded locality in the entire Karlovy Vary region. Support from local residents is the main reason the DSSS is returning to Rotava this weekend. The website Antifa.cz covers this topic and has published an extensive new article, "Nazis in Rotava", which news server Romea.cz is excerpting below. The full article can be read (in Czech only) at http://www.antifa.cz/content/nackove-v-rotave .
There are roughly 13 localities on the territory of the Karlovy Vary region that can be considered "socially excluded". In 2005 the Czech Labor and Social Affairs Ministry commissioned the "Analysis of Socially Excluded Romani Localities and Communities and the Absorption Capacity of Entities Working in the Area" (Analýza sociálně vyloučených romských lokalit a komunit a absorpční kapacity subjektů, působících v této oblasti). In that analysis, Rotava was labeled as the most socially excluded locality in the whole region. At the time, news server Romea.cz published the following commentary, from which we now cite the following as having been prescient: