Děkujeme za pochopení.
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Tohle kremlbotky cist nebudou. Podle nich to jsou lzi, nebo nechteji videt a slyset
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Já myslel, že Rusové po vzoru CIA dají Čečencům waterbording v délce asi jednoho měsíce, pak už Čečenci u soudu budou vzorně vypovídat, co mají, obzvláště když jim orgány sdělí, že vyhubí jejich příbuzné do třetího kolena, kdyby si chtěli hrát na pravdu. A oni Rusové takto...Prostě musej tu Ameriku ještě dohánat, nebo zavést zase totalitu, a pak už to bude jedno - všichni budou souhlasit, a kdo nebude, bude kácet lesy na Sibiři až do úplného porozumění režimu.
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Vy jste rychlejší než Česká televize a to je co říci. A ochránci lidských práv? Ti se ve světě už pořádně zprofanovali účelovým krytím různých zločinů. Tak si popovídali a co ?
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Reactions
Political consultant Gleb Pavlovsky opined that Russia had been overcome by "a Weimar atmosphere" in which there were "no longer any limits." And opposition activist Leonid Volkov maintained that Russians now lived "in a different political reality."[15]
Former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov lamented Nemtsov's death, expressing his shock that such an event could occur in modern Russia. At a memorial rally held in Moscow on March 1, the date on which Nemtsov had planned to lead an opposition march, mourners carried signs that read: "He was fighting for a free Russia," "Those shots were in each of us," "He died for the future of Russia," and "They were afraid of you, Boris." Several thousand people also marched in St Petersburg.[71][72]
An editorial in the Observer called Nemtsov’s murder "appalling" and reflected that such an event was characteristic of an authoritarian dictatorship. [73] Serge Schmemann of the New York Times wrote that the Moscow rally seemed like "a memorial march for the hopes and dreams that lay alongside Mr. Nemtsov’s murdered body in the middle of the night on the bridge to Red Square.