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In reply to the discussion: A List of Russian Provocations Against Its Neighbors [View all]Duckhunter935
(16,974 posts)42. and now they are being slowly deported again
Nice being the minority that Russia already deported once. But it is only 12% right. That is all well and fine for you. You do know that a lot did not vote in protest to voting under Russian guns.
On March 15, a day before the so-called referendum on the status of Crimea, a 39-year-old Tatar named Reshat Ametov was found dead after missing for several days. His body carried clear signs of torture: His head was wrapped with Scotch tape, and his legs were shackled.
His family said he had participated in protests against the seizure of the regional parliament by an unknown armed group, which Russian President Vladimir Putin later admitted was a Russian special forces unit. Police loyal to Moscow registered his cause of death as a traffic accident, but almost all Crimean Tatars heard the signal: Disloyalty to Russia would come at a price.
On March 31, a 14-year-old Tatar boy was beaten up by two Russian passers-by for speaking on the phone in the Tatar language. The incident occurred in the wake of calls by some Russians to discourage the use of the Tatar language and deport them again.
On May 6, a member of the Crimean Tatars' self-governing body was beaten by Russian "samooborona" militants in Simferopol after they stopped his car and demanded to see his documents. He refused to follow their orders, arguing that they were an illegal armed group, acting on behalf of Crimea's new rulers and using intimidation tactics to frighten and subdue their opponents.
More recently, veteran Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzemilev, a Soviet-era dissident who spent 15 years in prison and survived several hunger strikes, was twice denied entry to Crimea. Again, Russian "self-defence groups" prevented him from returning home.
His family said he had participated in protests against the seizure of the regional parliament by an unknown armed group, which Russian President Vladimir Putin later admitted was a Russian special forces unit. Police loyal to Moscow registered his cause of death as a traffic accident, but almost all Crimean Tatars heard the signal: Disloyalty to Russia would come at a price.
On March 31, a 14-year-old Tatar boy was beaten up by two Russian passers-by for speaking on the phone in the Tatar language. The incident occurred in the wake of calls by some Russians to discourage the use of the Tatar language and deport them again.
On May 6, a member of the Crimean Tatars' self-governing body was beaten by Russian "samooborona" militants in Simferopol after they stopped his car and demanded to see his documents. He refused to follow their orders, arguing that they were an illegal armed group, acting on behalf of Crimea's new rulers and using intimidation tactics to frighten and subdue their opponents.
More recently, veteran Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzemilev, a Soviet-era dissident who spent 15 years in prison and survived several hunger strikes, was twice denied entry to Crimea. Again, Russian "self-defence groups" prevented him from returning home.
http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2014/05/crimean-tatars-embrace-russia-20145135423720401.html
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All Russia wants is peace--a piece of Ukraine, a piece of Estonia, a piece of Lithuania......
Louisiana1976
Sep 2014
#1
Thank you, Benton.. we need the facts here. Not what Putin says brought to us by RTers
Cha
Sep 2014
#3
Exactly.. those poor people under fire.. but, "noooo, it's not really happening". :(
Cha
Sep 2014
#9
Can I steal this? LOL, if not, PM me with your name and I will give you credit. nt
stevenleser
Sep 2014
#5
"cooperating with fascist" no they aren't cooperating with the only real fascists
geek tragedy
Sep 2014
#18
That nonsense may play in Moscow and amongst those who long for Erich Honecker's tenure
geek tragedy
Sep 2014
#22
red herring. Russia is not above criticism. thanks for the logical fallacy though nt
geek tragedy
Sep 2014
#17
Well, you know the Russians only annexed all those countries for their own good, LOL.
freshwest
Sep 2014
#20
If I made a list dating back as far as you did abour Russia/USSR it would also be quite
rpannier
Sep 2014
#23
Oh 'tut-tut', why must you muddle the meme of the day? Thank you for posting, indeed.
Purveyor
Sep 2014
#51
As far as I can see it is none of my business, and the US should definitely stay out of it.
Exultant Democracy
Sep 2014
#32
We currently have nearly 1000 military bases outside of our territory.
Warren Stupidity
Sep 2014
#68
i see the usual suspects.. "But, But, But, the USA-Leave Russia Alone!!!111" Like two wrongs make
Cha
Sep 2014
#55
Because most of those countries had been under illegal occupation for half a century.
NuclearDem
Sep 2014
#110