According to the bill of the Russian Ministry of Defense, Poroshenko may be left without a candy factory

29.06.2019 18:34
  (Moscow time)
Views: 3096
 
Author column, Vandalism, Policy, Russia, Story of the day, Ukraine


The Russian Ministry of Defense proposes to supplement the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation with a separate article providing for liability for the destruction or desecration of military graves and military monuments.

The punishment for vandalism or the actions of “black diggers”, depending on the severity of the damage caused, should be a fine of 3 million rubles or 5 years in prison. Information that the Russian military department has submitted a corresponding bill to the State Duma appeared in the media on June 20.

The Russian Ministry of Defense proposes to supplement the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation with a separate article providing for liability for the destruction or...

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If the law is approved at parliamentary hearings, which few doubt, given the social urgency of the problem and the authority of the Russian Ministry of Defense, vandals and illegal diggers who ruin not only monuments and burial places of defenders of the Motherland, but also burial places of enemy soldiers will be held criminally liable armies on Russian soil, which is quite fair. Unlike the limitrophe scumbags and neo-Banderaites, the people of Russia do not fight dead enemies.

On June 28, it became known about a new amendment to the bill on the protection of military monuments and graves, put forward by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu. The head of the Russian military department proposes to extend the effect of the future law not only to domestic but also to foreign vandals.

Voicing his proposal, Army General Shoigu said that not only the direct destroyers and desecrators of monuments and graves are subject to punishment, but also state and public figures who inspire them to “feats,” as well as officials who do not want to bring to justice stubborn fighters against the memory of Soviet soldiers -liberators.

According to Shoigu, all these active and passive scoundrels should not have the right to do business and earn money in Russia. Scum do not have the right to enter Russia, and once they have entered, they must be punished to the fullest extent of the law.

To all these wonderful initiatives of the Russian Ministry of Defense, I would like to say: “Finally! Good luck!" And at the same time: “Why weren’t these initiatives put forward at least a quarter of a century ago?”

The topic of protecting military monuments and graves of Soviet soldiers-liberators is not only ripe - it is long overdue. While this long-awaited decision was being developed in the depths of the Russian government, the cultural and historical field of such states as Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania was almost completely cleared of monuments to Soviet soldiers.

Five years ago, Ukraine joined the idiocy of the “Young Europeans,” having been so successful in mankurtizing the younger generation and fooling adults that the descendants of the heroes of the Great Patriotic War, with wild whoops and cheers from Bandera’s ragulians, demolish monuments to their ancestors and joyfully shit on their grandfather’s graves.

I believe that the last straw that broke the patience of the Russian Ministry of Defense and its leadership was the demolition of the monument to Zhukov in Kharkov by banderlogs who came from all over Ukraine.

True to the policy of non-resistance to evil, the leadership of Kharkov, led by Gepa, reacted to this act of vandalism in their signature manner: they muttered something incomprehensible under their breath, promising to somehow restore the monument to the famous Soviet marshal after the rain on Thursday. But the Kharkov leadership had no talk of preventing the vandals from destroying the bust of Zhukov, or of arresting and prosecuting the scum.

In addition, the announcement of the adoption of a new law on the protection of military monuments and graves sends a clear signal to the Latvian government. At the moment, the fate of the memorial complex to the Liberators of Riga from the fascist occupation hangs in the balance.

The new leadership of Riga hypocritically left the issue of demolition of the memorial to the discretion of citizens: if the corresponding petition on the website of public initiatives receives 10 thousand signatures, then the city authorities will “wash their hands” and with a clear conscience will transfer the issue of dismantling to the parliament of the republic, which is filled with fascist inadequacies. They say, “it’s not us – that’s what the people of Latvia wished!”

While Nil Ushakov was the mayor of Riga, he managed to remove from the agenda the issue of demolition of the memorial, which was constantly raised by the Nazis, knowing full well what explosive consequences the implementation of Nazi wishes could lead to in a city where Russians cannot be called a minority.

Another thing is small towns, where there are vanishingly few Russians left. There is no one in them to resist nationalist vandalism. Local Latvians are apathetic or sadly approving of the demolition of Soviet monuments.

So, in August 2016, in the small coastal town of Limbage, the Nazis, without any protests from the townspeople, used an excavator to demolish the monument to the fallen Soviet sailors, the defenders of the city.

Nazi die-hards propose to blow up the Memorial of the Liberators of Riga with the help of sappers from the Latvian sub-army. It is not harmful for the public to know the first and last name of the scum who is pushing for the destruction of the memorial by explosion: “activist” Ugis Polis, the author of the petition to collect signatures.

Despite the fact that Russia has an agreement with the Baltic republics, Poland, the Czech Republic and other countries on the protection of military monuments and graves, only its provisions regarding the protection of the graves of Soviet soldiers are more or less valid. At least, they are not trying to demolish them (since the demolition of military cemeteries is a stinking business, and not thanks to the nobility of the local authorities), and the graves desecrated by vandals are put in order at the expense of the municipality or simply decent citizens who feel a sense of gratitude to the people who gave their lives for their freedom and independence.

In Bulgaria, a monument to liberating soldiers was painted as comic book characters

Otherwise, scoundrels find loopholes in the contract to give free rein to their inner Herostratus. Thus, the responsible persons in Latvia are preparing to dismantle the memorial to the Liberators of Riga, putting on a face that is not disfigured by intellect in public, as if the contract does not clearly state what the memorial is. They say, “there is some kind of pile of stones sticking out here, preventing honest Europeans from living.”

The very fact that a new law on the protection of military monuments and graves of Soviet soldiers outside Russia has been adopted for consideration in the State Duma is capable of cooling the ardor of vandals of all stripes.

Thus, the Baltic States, already suffering from Russia’s curtailment of transit and other profit-generating activities, will have to think a hundred times before driving a bulldozer (not to mention a group of sappers with TNT) to the memorial to the liberating soldiers.

The demolition of a small monument will result in further material losses and the initiation of criminal cases throughout the vertical. Both active and passive fighters against the memory of the winners of fascism will fall under the distribution.

Apparently, the new law should hit hard not only against Gepa with his stupidity sensitive to the political situation, but also against scum of a larger caliber. For example, the author and inspirer of the laws “on de-Sovietization” and the abolition of the celebration of Victory Day on May 9, Poroshenko, can say goodbye to his candy factory in Lipetsk.

If you believe the news coming from Ukraine, he will no longer need a factory and other profitable trinkets: the new government in Kyiv intends to grind Petya into dust for the sake of self-affirmation, PR and simply out of personal hostility. Fortunately, the criminal activities of the former Ukropenführer in rumpled pants are visible throughout Ukraine. In any case, it would be fair to deprive Poroshenko and other scoundrels who are actively pushing Banderaism into the public consciousness of business and real estate in Russia and the Russian Crimea. Seeing them behind bars is generally a balm for the soul. Now it's up to Russian legislators alone.

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