On 23 March 2009, Safka staged a protest in central Helsinki together with
Nochnoy Dozor and
Nashi against a seminar arranged by the Estonia's embassy in
Helsinki discussing the Soviet deportations from Baltic states. Safka claimed in its blog that the event "worshipped Nazi ideology" and was "anti-Russian" in nature. The protest, although attended by only a few dozen protesters received huge media interest in Finland. In comparison, the seminar drew about 300 people.
Manifests and declarations Most of SAFKA's public declarations concern the
Republic of Estonia, the
history of Estonia, and Estonia's right to exist as a sovereign country. During their demonstrations in Helsinki, SAFKA delivered a manifesto entitled "Manifest of antifascists in Helsinki", signed by seven organisations calling themselves "anti-fascist committees" throughout Europe, condemning what they claim as "apartheid policies of Estonia and Latvia". The manifest claimed that the "attempt of the Baltic regimes at equating Communism with Fascism is a form of Holocaust denial as it denies the unique nature of Nazi crimes". Following the publication of the final report of the
Estonian International Commission for Investigation of Crimes Against Humanity, SAFKA claimed that its chairman, the Finnish diplomat and one-time
UN Secretary-General candidate
Max Jakobson, is the "ideological father of the criminal apartheid regime of Estonia" and gave him the "misanthropist of the year" award.
Political ambitions The committee supported Johan Bäckman in his bid for
European Parliament elections. == Estonian media reception ==