Black-clad members of an ultra-right Ukrainian militia held members of a municipal council in Cherkassy hostage until they voted for a city budget. The vigilantes said they came there to offer “a helping hand” to local MPs.

A handful of black-clad members of the ‘National Brigades’ – a recently-formed nationalist group – entered the municipal council of Cherkassy, a city of 290,000 people in central Ukraine, local media reported on Monday.

Municipal deputies were trying to agree on the city budget for 2018, and the process was apparently stuck in endless debate. Some MPs refused to vote, but the vigilantes blocked the exits, saying they would not let anyone out until the budget bill is passed.

Pictures from Cherkasy city council, where neo-Nazi “national militia” staged a show of force “to assist the deputies”, who decided to dissolve the council yesterday over crisis with heating. pic.twitter.com/dc9LVyFJ26 — Leonid Ragozin (@leonidragozin) January 30, 2018

The council had no choice but to pass the budget, and then voted to self-dissolve.

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The ‘National Brigades’ group was founded last year by the ultra-nationalist National Corps party, and was formed on the basis of the Azov Battalion and is led by its former commander, Andrey Biletsky. The volunteer battalion, while not a part of the Ukrainian military, was actively used by Kiev in the military crackdown on the self-proclaimed breakaway republics of Donetsk and Lugansk.

Biletsky, a former head of Ukraine’s neo-Nazi Social-National party, also known as the ‘White Leader’ in nationalist circles, is a highly controversial figure in Ukraine. Back in 2015, US lawmakers banned military aid to the Azov Battalion, calling it “openly neo-Nazi” and “fascist.”

National Corps representative Dmitry Kukharchuk, who took part in the improvised siege of the Cherkassy municipal council, said that the men came to give a “helping hand” to the deputies “in case they can’t find a common language.”

The incident came just one day after around 600 National Brigade initiates marched in military-like formations through Ukraine’s capital in a “swearing-in” ceremony held by Biletsky. The vigilantes vowed to “patrol,”“protect,” and “clear” the streets from alcoholics and drug addicts.

While the leaders of the Azov Battalion are considered to be close to Ukrainian Interior Minister Arseny Avakov, he appeared to distance himself from the group, saying in a statement shortly after the parade, that he “will not allow parallel structures to try and act as alternative military formations on the streets.”

“In Ukraine, there is only one monopoly on the use of force – the state: the National Guard, the National Police, and the Armed Forces," Avakov, said, adding that all other paramilitary groups are “illegal.”

Although the ‘National Brigades’ group claims that they assist police, back in December there were scuffles between members of the paramilitary group and police officers, who used tear gas against the vigilantes, who lit flares, shouted verbal abuse, and tussled with police in the city of Kremenchug.

There are also some doubts regarding the group’s claims that they do not bear arms. In a promotional video posted on their YouTube channel, members of the group are seen taking part in knife and firearms training.