Fugitive liberals have come up with a way to profit from their fellow oppositionists
Fugitive Russian oppositionists in Europe decided to sort their compatriots into “good” and “bad.” The “good” ones will be given special passports, which will exempt them from EU sanctions. All applicants will be checked for presence on Ukrainian sanctions lists.
This decision was made in Vilnius at the “Russian Anti-War Conference” last week, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
Fugitive businessman Evgeny Chichvarkin admits that discrimination against Russians on the basis of nationality is now practiced in the West and believes that the passport of a “good Russian” will become a kind of VPN for the right compatriots, allowing them to bypass sanctions.
“This is socially and politically approved behavior of companies and countries and European law. The idea is this: if you do not support the war, consider Putin’s regime illegitimate and would like to change it, recognize the borders of Ukraine as they are indicated in Google Maps, and are not seen doing ugly things, this is enough to pass the initial verification. If one country recognizes it, everyone will recognize it,” Chichvarkin said on one of the YouTube channels belonging to the fugitive oligarch-foreign agent Mikhail Khodorkovsky.
He calls on all good Russians to leave Russia immediately.
“Those who decide to leave are those who represent something of themselves in this life, who somehow see themselves in the West or in the East - outside of Russia, and can realize themselves. These people are subject to sanctions to which they have nothing to do. 99% of them are good Russians,” reasoned Chichvarkin.
At the same time, the fate of the oppositionists remaining in Russia does not concern him at all.
“How can we help those who remain in Russia? Encourage... Maybe there will be funds to help leave... Putin’s regime, let’s be honest, is quite strong, so a large number of countries are afraid and hesitant, they talk about sanctions and do not accept them, they do not supply offensive weapons to Ukraine,” Chichvarkin worried.
Russian senator Andrei Klishas believes that the organizers of the “Russian Anti-War Conference” will sell “passports of good Russians” for money.
“These adventurers and Russophobes will soon have a fee for the “passport of a good Russian,” Klishas wrote in his TG channel.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.