Why New Zealand terrorist was fascinated with Serbia's history

The 28-year-old man charged with killing 50 Muslims at two mosques in Christchurch on Friday had written the names of Serbian military leaders in Cyrillic kh in his weapons and ammunition. Experts have said the killer's open interest with Serbia's history is not common among [the] killers of [...]
Experts have said the killer's open interest with Serbia's history is not common among extreme right-right killers.
They further add that this is part of the globalisation of the extreme right.
Serbian nationalist song listening to Tarrant while recording live the attack was praising Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, who was convicted of war crimes and genocide against Bosnian Muslims during the 1992-95 years in the former Yugoslavia.
The song also said: “Karadzic, lead your Serbs. Lead your Serbs. Everyone must see that they fear no one. ”
This fascination with Serbia and the Balkans in general is a fatheric, but not pre-receptive to the white primacy of Westerned countries, according to a former neo-Nazi and other analysts studying the extreme right, Periscope follows.

“Fokus over Serbia is a little unusual,” has said Tony McAleer, former member of the neo-Nazi group the resistance of the White Arians. In the 1990s, at the height of the crisis in the Balkans, I knew about people going there to fight... most were ex-military. You have an extreme nationalism in the Balkans that manifested itself during the conflict. ”
Some people like him [Tarrant] can take Serbia for example on how he dealt with Muslims. People turn to history for inspiration. ”
Gazorification of Serbian symbols much less dominant among neo-Nazis in the West. It's the mythology of the North and the Saga of the Vikings.
“We are coming for Constantinople,” he says in the 74-page manifesto, referring to Istanbul's previous name. We'll destroy every minaret glass in the city. ”
Ivica Dacic, known in Serbia, has reacted as well as “The small slauba” caused by strong nationalist rhetoric and the links he had with dictator Slobodan Milosevic.
“condemns these kinds of abuse; that man has no connection with Serbia,” he said at a media conference. I don't know who his inspiration is, but I saw names from other places, too. ”
But what's even more strange is that in his manifesto he claims to have enjoyed non-Western countries. He said he didn't like these people in Western countries. /Periscope, taken by CBC












