The Putin Murders
A Brief History of Putintime
March 1997
45-year-old former KGB agent Vladimir Putin (pictured, left) is plucked from obscurity out of the St.Petersburg local government apparatus by President Boris Yeltsin and named Deputy Chief of Staff. In June, he defends his PhD dissertation in “strategic planning” at St. Petersburg’s Mining Institute. Later, this document proves to have been plagiarized from a KGB translation of work by U.S. professors published many years earlier (as if nobody would notice, and in fact for quite a while nobody did).
July 1998
In a second inexplicable move, Yeltsin names Putin head of the KGB (now called the FSB).
November 1998
Less than four months after Putin takes over at the KGB, opposition Duma Deputy GalinaStarovoitova (pictured, right), the most prominent pro-democracy Kremlin critic in the nation, is murdered at her apartment building in St. Petersburg. Four months after that, Putin will play a key role in silencing the Russian Attorney General, Yury Skuratov, who was investigating high-level corruption in the Kremlin, by airing an illicit sex video involving Skuratov on national TV. Four months after the dust settles in the Skuratov affair, Putin will be named Prime Minister.
August 1999
Completing a hat trick of bizarre spontaneous promotions, proud KGB spy Putin is named by Yeltsin Prime Minister of Russia. Almost immediately, Putin orders a massive bombing campaign against the tiny, defenseless breakaway republic of Chechnya, apparently seeing the reassertion of Russian power there as key to overall resurgence of Russia’s military and state security apparatus, his primary political objective. On August 26th, he’s forced to acknowledge the horrific consequences of the bombing. Hundreds of civilians are killed and tens of thousands are left homeless as civilian targets are attacked. World opinion begins to turn starkly against Russia, especially in Europe, very similarly to the manner in which it has polarized against U.S. President George Bush over Iraq. Putin’s poll numbers in Russia begin to slide.
September 1999
An apartment building in the Pechatniki neighborhood of Moscow is blown up by a bomb. 94 are killed. Less than a week later a second bomb destroys a building in Moscow’s Kashirskoye neighborhood, killing 118. Days after that, a massive contingent of Russian soldiers is surrounding Chechnya as public opposition to the war evaporates. On October 1st, Putin declares Chechen president AslanMaskhadov and his parliament illegitimate. Russian forces invade.
New Year’s Eve, 1999
Boris Yeltsin resigns the presidency of Russia, handing the office to Putin in order to allow him to run as an incumbent three months later. Given the pattern of bizarre promotions Putin has previously received, the move is hardly even surprising. So-called “experts” on Russia scoff at the possibility that Putin could be elected, proclaiming that, having tasted freedom, Russia can “never go back” to the dark days of the USSR.
March 2000
Despite being the nominee of a man, Yeltsin, who enjoyed single-digit public approval ratings in polls, Vladimir Putin is elected “president” of Russia in a massive landslide (he wins nearly twice as many votes as his nearest competitor). Shortly thereafter, all hell breaks loose in Chechnya. Russia will ultimately be convicted of human rights violations before the European Court for Human Rights and condemned for its abuses of the civilian population by every human rights organization under the sun.
[Between April 2000 and March 2002, Russia plunges into a nightmarish conflict in Chechnya eerily similar to what America now faces in Iraq. Opposition journalists, especially those who dare to report on what it going on in Chechnya, suddenly start dying. In 2000 alone, reporters Igor Domnikov,Sergey Novikov, Iskandar Khatloni, Sergey Ivanov and Adam Tepsurgayev are murdered — not by hostile fire in Chechnya but in blatant assassinations at home in Russia. On June 16, 2001, at a press conference in Brdo Pri Kranju, Slovenia, President Bush is asked about Putin: “Is this a man that Americans can trust?” Bush replies: “I will answer the question. I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy. We had a very good dialogue. I was able to get a sense of his soul; a man deeply committed to his country and the best interests of his country. And I appreciated so very much the frank dialogue.”]
Sergei Yushenkov, co-chairman of the Liberal Russia political party (pictured, left), is gunned down at the entrance of his Moscow apartment block. Yushenkov had been serving as the vice chair of the group known as the “KovalevCommission” which was formed to informally investigate charges that Putin’s KGB had planted the Pechatniki and Kashirskoye apartment bombs to whip up support for the Putin’s war in Chechnya after the formal legislative investigation turned out to be impossible. Another member of the Commission, YuriShchekochikhin (see below) will perish of poisoning, a third will be severely beaten by thugs, and two other members will lose their seats in the Duma. The Commission’s lawyer, Mikhail Trepashkin (see below) will be jailed after a secret trial on espionage charges. Today, virtually none of the members of the Commission are left whole and it is silent.
May 2003
Putin’s popularity in opinion polls slips below 50% after sliding precipitously while the conflict in Chechnya became increasingly bloody. Suddenly, he begins to appear vulnerable, and oil billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky begins to be discussed as one who could unseat him. All hell breaks loose in Russian politics.
Yuri Shchekochikhin (pictured, right), a vocal opposition journalist and member of the Russian Duma and the Kovalev Commission, suddenly contracts a mysterious illness. Witnesses reported: “He complained about fatigue, and red blotches began to appear on his skin. His internal organs began collapsing one by one. Then he lost almost all his hair.” One of Shchekochikhin’s last newspaper articles before his death was entitled “Are we Russia or KGB of Soviet Union?” In it, he described such issues as the refusal of the FSB to explain to the Russian Parliament what poison gas was applied during the Moscow theater hostage crisis, and work of secret services from the former Soviet republic of Turkmenistan, which operated with impunity in Moscow against Russian citizens of Turkoman origin. According to Wikipedia: “He also tried to investigate the Three Whales Corruption Scandal and criminal activities of FSB officers related to money laundering through the Bank of New York and illegal actions of Yevgeny Adamov, a former Russian Minister of Nuclear Energy. This case was under the personal control of Putin. In June of 2003,Shchekochikhin contacted the FBI and got an American visa to discuss the case with US authorities. However, he never made it to the USA because of his sudden death on July 3rd. The Russian authorities refused to allow an autopsy, but according to Wikipedia his relatives “managed to send a specimen of his skin to London, where a tentative diagnosis was made of poisoning with thallium” (a poison commonly used by the KGB, at first suspected in the Litvinenko killing).
October 2003
Assaults on the enemies of the Kremlin reach fever pitch as the election cycle begins. Within one week at the end of the month, two major opposition figures are in prison.
October 22, 2003
October 22, 2003
Mikhail Trepashkin (pictured, right), a former KGB spy and the attorney for theKovalev Commission, is arrested for illegal possession of a firearm (which he claims was planted in his vehicle). Also retain to represent some of the victims of the apartment bombingstheselves, Trepashkin allegedly uncovered a trail of a mysterious suspect whose description had disappeared from the files and learned that the man was one of his former FSB colleagues. He also found a witness who testified that evidence was doctored to lead the investigation away from incriminating the FSB. The weapons charge against Trepashkinmysteriously morphs into a spying charge handled by a closed military proceeding that is condemned by the U.S. government as being a blatant sham, and Trepashkin is sent to prison for four years. Publius Pundit reported on Trepashkin’s plight back in early December of last year.
October 25, 2003
Just as the presidential election cycle is beginning, Khodorkovsky (pictured, left) is arrested at the airport in Novosibirsk. He will be tried and convicted for tax fraud and sent to Siberia, just like in the bad old days of the USSR, in a show trial all international observers condemn as rigged (his lawyer has documented the legal violations in a 75-page treatise). He is there today, now facing a second prosecution for the same offense. His company, YUKOS, is being slowly gobbled up by the Kremlin.
Just as the presidential election cycle is beginning, Khodorkovsky (pictured, left) is arrested at the airport in Novosibirsk. He will be tried and convicted for tax fraud and sent to Siberia, just like in the bad old days of the USSR, in a show trial all international observers condemn as rigged (his lawyer has documented the legal violations in a 75-page treatise). He is there today, now facing a second prosecution for the same offense. His company, YUKOS, is being slowly gobbled up by the Kremlin.
March 2004
With Khodorkovsky conveniently in prison and the Kovalev Commission conveniently muzzled, Vladimir Putin is re-elected “president” of Russia, again in a landslide despite his poll numbers. He faces no serious competition from any opposition candidate. He does not participate in any debates. He wins a ghastly, Soviet-like 70% of the vote. Immediately, talk begins of a neo-Soviet state, with Putin assuming the powers of a dictator. The most public and powerful enemies of the regime start dropping like flies.
Nikolai Girenko (pictured, left), a prominent human rights defender, Professor of Ethnology and expert on racism and discrimination in the Russian Federation is shot dead in his home in St Petersburg.Girenko’s work has been crucial in ensuring that racially motivated assaults are classified as hate crimes, rather than mere hooliganism, and therefore warrant harsher sentences — as well as appearing as black marks on Russia’s public record.
Paul Klebnikov (pictured, right), editor of the Russian edition Forbes magazine, is shot and killed in Moscow. Forbes has reported that at the time of his death, Paul was believed to have been investigating a complex web of money laundering involving a Chechen reconstruction fund, reaching into the centers of power in the Kremlin and involving elements of organized crime and the FSB(the former KGB).
Viktor Yushchenko, anti-Russian candidate for the presidency of the Ukraine, is poisoned by Dioxin. Yushchenko’s chief of staff OlegRibachuk suggests that the poison used was amycotoxin called T-2, also known as “Yellow Rain,” a Soviet-era substance which was reputedly used in Afghanistan as a chemical weapon. Miraculously, he survives the attack.
[Throughout the next year, a full frontal assault on the media is launched by the Kremlin. Reporters Without Borders states: “Working conditions for journalists continued to worsen alarmingly in 2005, with violence the most serious threat to press freedom. The independent press is shrinking because of crippling fines and politically-inspired distribution of government advertising. The authorities’ refusal to accredit foreign journalists showed the government’s intent to gain total control of news, especially about the war in Chechnya.”]
Andrei Kozlov (pictured, left), First Deputy Chairman of Russia’s Central Bank, who strove to stamp out money laundering (basically acting on analyses like that of reporterKlebnikov), the highest-ranking reformer in Russia, is shot and killed in Moscow. Many media reports classify Kozlov’s killing as “an impudent challenge to all Russian authorities” and warn that “failure to apprehend the killers would send a signal to others that intimidation of government officials is once again an option.” Less considered is the possibility that Kozlov, like Klebnikov, was on the trail of corruption that would have led into the Kremlin itself, which then lashed out at him preemptively assuming he could not be bought.
Anna Politkovskaya (pictured, right), author of countless books and articles exposing Russian human rights violations in Chechnya and attacking Vladimir Putin as a dictator, is shot and killed at her home in Moscow. In her bookPutin’s Russia, Politkovskaya had written: “I have wondered a great deal why I have so got it in for Putin. What is it that makes me dislike him so much as to feel moved to write a book about him? I am not one of his political opponents or rivals, just a woman living in Russia. Quite simply, I am a 45-year-old Muscovite who observed the Soviet Union at its most disgraceful in the 1970s and ’80s. I really don’t want to find myself back there again.” Analysts begin to talk openly of Kremlin complicity in the ongoing string of attacks.Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum writes: “Local businessmen had no motivation to kill her — but officials of the army, the police and even the Kremlin did. Whereas local thieves might have tried to cover their tracks, Politkovskaya’s assassin, like so many Russian assassins, did not seem to fear the law. There are jitters already: A few hours after news of Politkovskaya’s death became public, a worried friend sent me a link to an eerie Russian Web site that displays photographs of ‘enemies of the people’ — all Russian journalists and human rights activists, some quite well known. Above the pictures is each person’s birth date and a blank space where, it is implied, the dates of their deaths will soon be marked. That sort of thing will make many, and probably most, Russians think twice before criticizing the Kremlin about anything.”
November 2006
November 2006
Alexander Litvinenko (pictured, left), KGB defector and author of the book Blowing up Russia, which accuses the Kremlin of masterminding the and Pechatniki andKashirskoye bombings in order to blame Chechen terrorists and whip up support for an invasion of Chechnya (which shortly followed), is fatally poisoned by radioactive Polonium obtained from Russian sources. Litivinenko had given sensational testimony to the Kovalev Commission and warned Sergei Yushenkov that was a KGB target). In his last days Litvinenko himself, as well as other KGB defectors, including Oleg Kalugin, Yuri Shvets and Mikhail Trepashkin (who allegedly actually warned Litvinenko that he had been targeted before the hit took place) directly blamed the Kremlin for ordering the poisoning. Recent press reports indicate that British investigators have come to the same conclusion. With Litvinenko out of the picture, the only member of the Kovalev Commission left unscathed is its 77-year-old namesake chairman, dissident Sergei Kovalev — who has grown notably silent.
March 2007
March 2007
On Sunday February 25th, the American TV news magazine Dateline NBC aired a report on the killing of Litvinenko. MSNBC also carried a report. The reports confirmed that British authorities believe Litvinenko perished in a “state-sponsored” assasination. In the opening of the broadcast, Dateline highlighted the analysis of a senior British reporter and a senior American expert on Russia who knew Litvinennko well. Here’s an excerpt from the MSNBC report:
Daniel McGrory, a senior correspondent for The Times of London, has reported many of the developments in the Litvinenko investigation. He said the police were stuck between a rock and a hard place. “While they claim, and the prime minister, Tony Blair, has claimed nothing will be allowed to get in the way of the police investigation, the reality is the police are perfectly aware of the diplomatic fallout of this story,” McGrory said. “Let’s be frank about this: The United States needs a good relationship with Russia, and so does Europe,” said Paul M. Joyal, a friend of Litvinenko’s with deep ties as a consultant in Russia and the former Soviet states. Noting that Russia controls a significant segment of the world gas market, Joyal said: “This is a very important country. But how can you have an important relationship with a country that could be involved in activities such as this? It’s a great dilemma.”
Five days before the broadcast aired, shortly after he was interviewed for it, McGrory was dead. His obituary reads “found dead at his home on February 20, 2007, aged 54.” Five days after the broadcast aired, Joyal (pictured, right) was lying in a hospital bed after having been shot for no apparent reason, ostensibly the victim of a crazed random street crime. He was returning home after having dinner with KGB defector Oleg Kalugin, and had been an aggressive advocate for Georgian independence from Russian influence. The attack remains unsolved.
CONCLUSION: Did the Kremlin have anything to do with either Joyal’s or McGrory’s fates, or is it just coincidence that both were struck down within days of giving statements directly blaming the Kremlin for Litvinenko’s killing to the American press? Would the Kremlin really be so brazen as to attack an American for speaking in America? Whether it did not not is almost beside the point: the thing you can’t see is always scarier than the thing you can. The Kremlin is now positioned to turn random accidents into weapons. Appelbaum sums it up: “As Russian (and Eastern European) history well demonstrates, it isn’t always necessary to kill millions of people to frighten all the others: A few choice assassinations, in the right time and place, usually suffice. Since the arrest of oil magnate Mikhail Khodorkovsky in 2003, no other Russian oligarchs have attempted even to sound politically independent. After the assassination of Politkovskaya on Saturday, it’s hard to imagine many Russian journalists following in her footsteps to Grozny either.”
NOTE: For more on the Putin murders from a panel of Russia experts, clickhere.
January 2009
On January 19, 2009, Russian human rights attorneyStanslav Markelov(pictured, right) was shot in the back of the head with a silenced pistol as he left a press conference at which he announced his intention to sue the Russian government for its early release of the Col. Yuri Budanov, who murdered his 18-year-old client in Chechnya five years earlier. Also shot and killed was Anastasia Barburova, a young journalism student who was working for Novaya Gazeta and who had studied under Anna Politkovskaya, reporting on the Budanov proceedings.
July 2009
On July 14, 2009, leading Russian human rights journalist and activist Natalia Estemirova (pictured, left), a single mother of a teenaged daughter, was abducted in front of her home in Grozny, Chechnya, spirited across the border into Ingushetia, shot and dumped in a roadside gutter. Viewed as the successor to Anna Politkovskaya and by far the most prominent living critic of Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov, who had repeatedly threatened her life, Estemirova was a member of the “Memorial” human rights NGO and a steadfast defender of human rights in Chechnya. Most recently, she had been reporting on the barbaric practice of the government in burning down the homes of rebel activists, often with women and children locked inside.
One UK source closely linked to British intelligence told how he had a conversation with a Russian intelligence officer in 2004, in which the Russian spy spoke of the killing of a British citizen carried out by Russian agents. In January 2004, Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Workman was found shot dead on his doorstep in the Hertfordshire hamlet of Furneux Pelham. The killing seemed completely motiveless.
END QUOTE
Eurasian Secret Services Daily Review
AIA http://www.axisglobe.com/article.asp?article=1713
REVIEW TOPICS:
Former Chechen separatist commander assassinated in Instanbul
Islam Dzhanibekov, 38, who had been living with his family in Istanbul, Turkey, for the last six years, was killed in Istanbul, Russian news agency RIA Novosti reports, referring to
Turkish media.
Small Special Pistol) Groza, a silenced double-barreled 7.62 mm pistol, near his home in Umraniye district of Istanbul.
Groza pistols are used by Russian intelligence services and the Turkish authorities have not ruled out Russian involvement in the
shooting.
when two Russian intelligence agents were convicted for a car bombing that killed Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, a former Chechen President, who had taken refuge there.
Turkey. The agency said similar circumstances could have led to the murder of Dzhanibekov. Dzhanibekov was killed on December 9, however, the Turkish police revealed this information only today, Russian Public TV channel adds.
Russian Defence Ministry TV channel Zvezda alleges that this was Islam Dzhanibekov’s `nom de guerre’. Dzhanibekov was declared in federal
search after acts of terrorism in Essentuki, Mineralniye Vody and Karachayevo-Cherkesia autonomus republic on March 24, 2001. He was
accused of masterminding of bombings which resulted in death of about 30 people, more than 100 were wounded, according to Zvezda TV. One of the executors of these acts of terror, ?rasul Khubiyev, admitted during interrogation that he commited acts of terrorism under
Dzhanibekov’s direct instruction, Russian daily Izvestia adds.
bodies told to the daily Izvestia. Money for the organization of acts of terrorism transferred to Dzhanibekov, have been received from
profit of the shops located in Moscow in the market of building materials at metro station Bitsevsky Park. They were operated by
Sergei Orel, a Russian military who accepted Islam and came over to the insurgents. He was carrying out their special tasks and lived in
Moscow under false identity, Izvestia notes.
560 grams with cartridges, its length is 115 mm, height – 91 mm. It has a number of original design features: it does not have magazin (in
the handgrip there is a dispatch-trigger mechanism), two barrels are located one under another. The main feature is that no muffler is
necessary for this pistol. The special SP-3 7.62 mm cartridge forms an independent “silent complex”. Evidently these were the cartridges that made the Turkish mass media think of Russian special services involvement in the murder.
I have also worked for a Russian company here in Washington state and would never ever trust a Russian businessman as far as I could toss an elephant with one hand. Keep up the good work and thank you for sharing the information with the rest of us.
All of yours incrimination are not evident.
Well I thank God that our president Putin but no Saakashvilly. Saakashvilly are murderer indeed. And mass killing in Georgia is only link of chain! Are you acquainted with writer Giga Liparteliani. Those Georgian writer illuminates to detail about death of many people in Georgia at last time (e.g. prime-minister Zurab Jvania and businessman Badry Patarkacishvilly).
http://www.photoxpress.biz/news_info.asp?news_id=811001
http://www.giga-polit.ru/about.aspx
http://www.giga-polit.ru/articlelist.aspx
Unfortunately most of his books were published in Russia, but there are also some english language books.
Putin’s daddy worked for NKVD, his little monkey son worked for KGB… you dont really need a lot of thinking there to diagnose what kind of living shit he is, like all who wont agree with the fact that this piece of cunt should not walk the earth.
UK Police & coroner will not be make a problem for their Saak. it is clear.
But Putin will be guilty in all occasion because he does not want to sell country which he heads (my motherland Russia).
UK Police & coroner is not honor (as any western athority body).
I say that western people are very poor informative about Georgian reality. Many of indeed independence writers are published UNFORTUNATELY in Russia only. Many of them are not passed by the censor in western countries.
Whatever your smoking, can I have some? How nice it must be to be wondering around in a state of delusional ignorance. Like I stated in an earlier post, you Russians seem to think all governments and people are as corrupt and ignorant as you are and they are here to teach us all a lesson. Read the other day a highway patrolman in Nebraska was offered a $25K bribe to let the guy go, guess what, the guy was also prosecuted for attempted bribery. Think that would happen in Russia? NOT!!!
May be all Russian employees, public servants and military servants are bribetakers!? It is tipically horse of feather as well as to think the contrary of the other countries.
quote:
May be all Russian employees, public servants and military servants are bribetakers!? It is tipically horse of feather as well as to think the contrary of the other countries.
enquote.
My father in law refused to take bribes when he was a factory mangager in “Glorious Russia” and his bosses tried to have him killed because bribes are tithed on up the chain.
Get a life “I am Russian” your country and culture is a stain on humanity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viktor_Popkov (Popkov was very little known in the West though) orhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malika_Umazheva (also the same small village, the former chief of administration).
Also at Beslan a Georgian journalist was detained along with her cameraman. They were filming on the side of the school that the Russian troops assaulted.
She was beaten and given a dose of drugs while in custody that caused memory loss. Her cameraman was never seen again, nor were the camera and film of the events.
_____________________________
Wednesday, 04 March 2009 12:14
World Bulletin / News Desk
Jeremy Putley
basically, the pointed paragraph is just a speculation, which was a valid one until the officials had no official (sic!) answer.
as there is one now, as the case was closed with incriminating a particular person for ordering the killing – the original assumption is not valid anymore.
Eurasian Secret Services Daily Review
AIA
terror against the Chechen refugees in Europe, the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah reports.
Exchange of information has been conducted between the Turkish and French officials. The mysterious murders of Chechen in Istanbul, had
alarm not only the Turkish security units but also the French intelligence service. A few days ago, a French delegation secretly came
to Turkey to get information about the murder cases of Chechens. The delegation met with prosecutors and intelligence service. According to information, some time ago the French intelligence units got info saying
that armed and bomb assassinations of the Chechen leaders would be conducted in France.
addresses and IDs of the Chechen leaders living in France. The French anti-terror police has given a strict protection to the Chechen leaders
and their families living in the country.
Organization (MIT). The Liaison Judge Philippe Dorcet from French delegation said the following to “Sabah” newspaper: “We have got
information from our secret police DGSE that assassinations of the Chechens would be carried out in France. We are doing a very secret
investigation in this direction. Chechen murders that occurred one after another in Turkey attracted our attention. We think murders in Turkey show similarities to each other. We have established a special intelligence team for Chechens living in France. A Russian connection is closely examined from the intelligence that we got.”
Chechens do not relate to organized crime. In the meantime it is reported that the MIT has prepared a report on three Chechen murder
cases. The report says that the killed Ghazi Edilsultanov, Islam Janibekov, and Ali Osayev are all participated in the resistance in Chechnya. The report also indicates that the most of the Chechen groups enter Turkey illegally, but they do not do any crimes here.
http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/LS525346.htm
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/600/42/375769.htm
Thousands of Chechens disappeared after being taken away by Russian troops. One death squad targeted ‘black widow’ bombers such as those who seized a Moscow theatre in 2002
Paul Khlebnikov glorified Putin and was murded. His may-be murderers were justificated by a jury.
Andrei Kozlov, a state inspector, had a conflict with banker Frenkel and was murded. His murderers are imprisoned.
Maxim Sokolov, Yelena Chudinova, Konstantin Krylov (or I as well) critisize Putin and picture Medveded a pure idiot who kisses Obama’s ass, but everybody is still alive.
Thank you for your explaination. This is the first time that I am chatting in a forum of this type. I will be posting many more comments and hope that some will sink into the minds of the brainwashed trolls.
Denis St. does not approve murders of somebody. He only said that people mentioned above were rats, they worked against our country they lied day after day against Russia. Their accusations against my motherland were lie but their were convincing in the West. They were convenience for anti-Russians in the world and they were some kind of terrorists – information terrorists. So they merited what had happened with them. But there are nothing evidences that would point to Putin or someone else Russian official.
Zurab Jvania died from a leaking gas heater, and Patrikatsishvili died from heart disease brought on by years of smoking.
There is no evidence either were murdered.
As opposed to those valiant Russians mentioned above, who were all violently murdered.
You are the information terrorist.
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/06/04/russia-prosecute-rights-violations-north-caucasus
Russia’s Supreme Court has ordered a retrial of three men acquitted of involvement in the murder of Anna Politkovskaya, the campaigning journalist and Kremlin critic.
Published: 11:42AM BST 25 Jun 2009
12 August 2009
I would believe to him that not everything in Russia is entirely bad. If you believe everthing was bad, ask yourself if you do not simplify too much. And if maybe you do not serve this way to some people who gain profit from war.
Anywhere in the world you will find people who behave stupidly, egoist, even killing others to pursuit their goals.
If you would like to know some stories specifically about trustworthyness of police and coroners in UK you may check:http://www.dorsetvictimsupport.org/
I just saw that I could find NOTHING about this story on the internet. Strange. But if you would like to know more, I’d guess the guys there would be happy about some support. Write to:
Save Pasadena Villa
3 St. Anthony’s Road
Meyrick Park Halt
Bournemouth BH2 6PB
Dorset
Lord Peter Hamilton-Harvey at
Pasadena Villa
…
on top of it, otherwise letters will be returned.
Тогда уж и Obama причастен к казусу с Malik Nadal Hasan
that’s who!!!
президент издательского холдинга «Совершенно секретно»,
died March 9, 2000, plane crash
политический и военный деятель,
died april 28, 2002, helicopter crash
Berezovsky owed Litvinenko for holding off police at LogoVaz offices, after Listyev’s murder. When Litvinenko became a nuisance to the regime and a dead weight to Berezovsky, he was executed.
Its fun to take shots at you, who ever is writing for LA RUSSOPHOBE.
Both men have prodigious appetites. But our man ? That old wax work Berlusconi is no competition.
VP – So manly – example to us all.
Lada endurance test driver, fighter pilot, pianist and cabaret raconteur, rippling 6 pack, bear trapper, toilet assassin. An office cabinet full of trophy heads on dry ice and a cool 40 billion in the bank. He’s got it all.
Dimitry who?
Btw Domety was that a pre written obituary you posted?
I believe (if my studying is correct) that he was a low level analyst the whole time he was part of the Soviet KGB; observed Eastern Germany, wrote reports and drank beer with his friends.
In that he has a balding head, wouldn’t the horns show through better if he were such a demon?
Can you do a better job? That is what I ask myself when I step-up and prepare to throw that stone from inside my glass house. I usually put the stone down and look for ways to better myself, and society, rather than be an arm-chair critic. And I am FAR from perfect.
Unemployment,
No Human’s rights,
Crime,
Prostitution,
Worst ecology,
Terrorism…
Putin gave our Amur islands to China and now Chinese army in no time can trespass Russian border. Razor wire is taken away and our border guards are moved to centre of the country.
For more information about us at volya-naroda.ru
Telephone number – +79278125256
E-mail contact@raznesi.info
Come to the rally on April 21st! Let’s make impeachment out of this inauguration!
pour dirt on Russia because it will not help you.
P.S. Most Russian are proud of the
President Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin. The general attitude to him is positive and “people” who criticizes him are mainly influenced by the Americans. Their aim is to destabilise the situation inside Russia, which will never happen.
simple, yet effective. A lot of times it’s very hard to get that “perfect balance” between usability and visual appeal. I must say you’ve done a great
job with this. In addition, the blog loads extremely fast
for me on Safari. Exceptional Blog!
Nonetheless, the posts are too brief for novices. Could you please lengthen them a little from subsequent time?
Thank you for the post.
The west needs to support the victims of this ongoing crime and execute Putin and his criminal government.
I might state. This is the first time I frequented your website page and up
to now? I amazed with the analysis you made to create this particular submit incredible.
website which presents these things in quality?
Unemployment – Russia has one of the most unemployment rates in the world – FACT
No Human’s rights – gay people, anti-journalism campaigns – FACT
Crime – worthless to mention this
Prostitution – Russians are in top for this ancient job
Worst ecology – entire forests cut down, CO2 emissions you do not care off, coal plants everywhere, corruption again taken its part
Terrorism – MH17 – AND THIS SAYS IT ALL…
For some reason, Google seems to have intentionally narrowed search parameters to prevent finding “Russian found shot in upscale/exclusive US neighborhood while jogging” …serious limited search parameters – WHY?
http://iakal.wordpress.com/2014/08/05/the-energy-war-between-u-s-a-and-russia-and-the-threat-for-israels-survival/
This type of clever work and reporting! Keep up the good works guys I’ve incorporated you guys to our blogroll.
It was all Putin’s fault and now Russia should have to pay.
By David Wilson Nov 14, 2014 11:52 AM ET
Now he is killing the Russian Economy.
Pukin will be riding the russian beast shirtless down the gutter as was bound to happen once the west decided enough was enough.
Would not a German, UK or swiss author about these Events with an eBook be very usefull!?
Maybe you could put these Text Infos in a simple movie Form on youtube!? Would surely reach hundreds more also in Russia where Internet is still not fully censored.
The current case with Czechzenian scapegoats for Another murder would garantee also local Attention