Robert Ustian knows that neo-Nazi hooligans who have run riot through Russian football for decades could take him out on any given day.
The 34-year-old CSKA Moscow supporter sends out handfuls of secret spotters to the Red Army club's matches to chronicle racist abuse.
Ustian then forwards the videos of Nazi salutes and chilling Waffen-SS banners to the authorities -- and waits to see what might befall him next.
"We are opposing not the nicest guys in the world," Ustian told AFP in an English-language interview.
"I think those guys only know my identity because I try to hide all the others (the other spotters). They have families, children," he said.
"But we have come too far and even if something bad happens to me, there are people who will take over."
- Thug life -
- Courtship -
"He showed that they share many of the same principles and views."
"The police and the security services have lists of people of interest," said Semyonov. "And we are not talking about 100 or 200 people. It is much, much more."
- Denial -
"And if you disagree, you are going to have problems. There is no challenge to the far-right fan groups."
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