Jaak Madison, head of the youth wing of the Conservative People's Party of Estonia, which organized the march, confirmed that members of the group "participated in the torch-lit march, along with guests from other parties in Latvia and Lithuania."
Nordisk Ungdoms deltagande under självständighetsfirandet i Estland igår uppmärksammas i estnisk media: http://t.co/nxX9MxBvMG #eupol
— Patrik Forsén (@pforsen) 25 февраля 2015
"Nordisk Ungdom's participation in Independence Day celebrations in Estonia yesterday highlighted in Estonian media."
Nordisk Ungdom, an extreme nationalist group which formed in Sweden in 2010, is considered by Swedish police and anti-fascist activists to be a "fascist and right-wing activist organization."
Madison defended the group's participation in the march, which had gathered about 200 people Tuesday night for a march through the old city of Tallinn, including past the Russian embassy. He noted that the term "radical" is used in an "arbitrary and uncontrolled way."
The CPPE had invited "all patriots seeking to express their respect toward Estonia" to the event. Slogans featured in the march included "For Estonia!" and "Estonia for Estonians!" Following the march, participants sang songs and gave speeches. Estonian and Russian media reported that the event took place without any provocations.
On January 1, a torch-lit procession took place in Kiev and in regions across western Ukraine to commemorate the birthday of Stepan Bandera, a Ukrainian fascist and militant who collaborated with Nazi Germany, and later convicted of terrorism by Poland.
Human Rights Group Secretary Andrei Sarenkov of movement "Estonia Without Nazism" told LifeNews that "as cultured people, we understand where this sort of thing starts and what it could lead to. Today these guys hold a torch, but tomorrow they may take up weapons. And we know, most importantly, how all this ends, and it ends badly, in Germany and in Ukraine."
Earlier on Tuesday, Estonian and NATO armed forces held a parade in the border city of Narva, just 300 meters from the Russian border.
PHOTOS: US soldiers take part in a military parade in Narva #Estonia pic.twitter.com/kT1sPb9RSO - @demonito
— Conflict News (@rConflictNews) 24 февраля 2015