I'm sure there are, but some of these guys have been beating immigrants for years where I live (they even murdered an african student years ago), so there's an emotional connection.
Fair enough. I agree with the sentiment that these unsavoury elements do Ukraine no favours especially from an outside perspective, but as someone who has spent years in the country, in the areas where the Ukrainian resistance (and therefore the collaboration with the Nazis) led by Bandera is most invoked, I’ve never met or seen anyone celebrating Nazism in public. People give over due prominence to Azov and other right-wing fringe elements in Ukraine.
The history is somewhat complicated, but in the same way Russia has completely corrupted the slur of labelling someone a “Nazi”, in Ukraine the use of some Nazi symbology by some groups has become completely devoid of its original meaning too. It has become a sort of distillation of anti-Russian/-Soviet/-colonial sentiment from the oppression around WWII, more than any beliefs or understanding of German National Socialism.
Some of Philippe Sands’s books and the documentary he made touches on this.