| Russian human right activists apply to the West to investigate KGB murder of Polish President |
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| Written by smoc | |||
| Wednesday, 05 May 2010 21:29 | |||
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Ignace Reiss, Leon Trotsky, Stepan Bandera, Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev, Alexander Litvinenko (these are political refugees from Russia, killed by KGB terrorists in the West - KC).... They are very different political figures, with different biographies. But they have something in common in their death - all these people were strong enemies of the KGB and the Kremlin. They were killed by the KGB, although they lived outside Russia. Killed with ice axes and polonium, hydrocyanic acid and explosives ...
Now many people in the world see serious reasons to add to this list
the names of the dead Polish President Lech Kaczynski and all those,
who flew with him on the same plane. However, in 1999, in a series of bombings of apartment buildings in Moscow and Volgodonsk, and the mining of a residential building in Ryazan, the KGB did not think their crimes to be "too monstrous"! And they were not afraid of any exposures at that time. In bombing of the car with the former President of the CRI Zelimkhan Yandarbiyev in a foreign country, Qatar, they also did not fear any exposure at all. And in reality, they paid for it almost nothing, after being caught red-handed in this crime... Everything is permitted for Russian servants of cloak and dagger when it comes to keep their power or to destroy their opponents. The "reset" in relations with the KGB-run Kremlin turned into a reset of Katyn for Poland. And, unfortunately, it is logical, we are to admit. Therefore, we urge international community to investigate thoroughly the circumstances of the Smolensk disaster and in no case reject the version that the organizers of Katyn 2 are colleagues and successors to those who carried out Katyn 1. The Smolensk "fog" that hid the circumstances of the disaster is much denser and thicker than the famous fog in London ... Nadezhda Nizovkina, journalist (Ulan-Ude) Tatyana Stetsura, lawyer (Ulan-Ude) Alexander Maysuryan, journalist (Moscow) Mikhail Gerasimov (St. Petersburg) Andrey Derevyankin, former political prisoner Pavel Lyuzakov, aformer political prisoner, editor-in-chief, newspaper "Free Speech" (Moscow) Lyubov Raskina, member of the Democratic Union and the People's Labor Union (Israel) Dmitry Vorobyevsky, editor-in-chief, newspaper "Kramola" (Voronezh).
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The
Russian factor in this year’s Ukrainian presidential elections is
essentially a straw man and far less important key than five years ago.
Russian political technologists openly worked for one candidate (Viktor
Yanukovych), while Moscow allegedly sought to poison the opposition
candidate (Viktor Yushchenko) and President Vladimir Putin visited Kyiv
on the eve of the first and second rounds to endorse Yanukovych. Putin
congratulated Yanukovych on his “victory” two days after the second
round –and one day before the central election commission had released
the official results. |
