Pakistani worker shot in Greece's Athens in suspected hate crime
Anti-racism group Keerfa said Ali Riaz, 26, had been repeatedly fired at by a taxi driver in central Athens when he and other Muslims were returning from prayers to mark the end of Ramadan.
A Pakistani worker has been shot in the head in Greece in a suspected hate crime ahead of a key appeals trial involving the notorious neo-Nazi group Golden Dawn.
Anti-racism group Keerfa said on Wednesday Ali Riaz, 26, had been repeatedly fired at by a passing taxi driver in central Athens as he and other Muslims were returning from prayers to mark the end of Ramadan.
Doctors later removed a pellet from his left temple, the group said.
"I did not see his face...but he was white," Riaz told state TV ERT.
The incident that took place on Monday comes ahead of an appeals trial on June 15 involving dozens of members of the Golden Dawn group, formerly Greece's third most popular party.
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Golden Dawn: A controversial group
In a ruling in October 2020, Golden Dawn leader Nikos Michaloliakos and nearly 60 other members were found guilty of participation in a criminal organisation.
Crimes attributed to the group included the murder of a Greek anti-racism rapper and the serious beating of an Egyptian fisherman.
Of the 57 people convicted in 2020, 40 were jailed and 35 are still in prison.
Golden Dawn, a xenophobic and anti-Semitic organisation, existed on the fringes of Greek politics until the country's 2010 debt crisis.
It capitalised on public anger over immigration and austerity cuts, entering parliament for the first time in 2012 with a total of 18 seats.
Three years later, Golden Dawn emerged as the third most powerful political force in the country.
One of the Golden Dawn cadres jailed in 2020 is former party spokesperson, Ilias Kasidiaris. He has formed a new nationalist party that polls at under two percent.
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