It’s time for an open windows for Putin… we still can it call “suicide”.
DavidShaw90s on
This is exactly why pre-trial detention is one of the most vicious tools of state repression in the world. You do not even need to convict someone if you can just break them in a cell first. Pushing an artist to suicide before he ever sees a judge is just state-sanctioned murder disguised as legal procedure!
The terrifying part is how normalized this tactic is becoming globally to crush dissent and political opposition. We are seeing Turkey weaponize the courts with prison sentences to sideline the Mayor of Istanbul. In Albania, an EU candidate country, the state literally locked the Mayor of Tirana in pre-trial detention for over a year without a single conviction.
When a government can throw you in a cage indefinitely without proving you did anything wrong, you do not live in a free society.
Heavy_Secret_203 on
>Andrey Akuzin, 53, was found hanged in his cell at a detention facility in the Far Eastern city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur.
The exact russian Far-East city where it is ok for Chinese workers to protest, but for locals, it’s a big no-no, they get their faces beaten into the mud even if they are elderly women.
conrat4567 on
You can never trust Russia when it comes to these things. People always mysteriously die in obvious ways and Russia feigns ignorance
AkiBismarck on
Window was left open in his detention cell
mindthegoat_redux on
Them open windows be windowing.
Intro-Nimbus on
Just like Epstein. Something tells me there was no camera footage available in this case either.
firewalks_withme on
Russia doing russian things
Willy757 on
I wonder if we are as different as it feels. I could never live in such a society. I wouldn’t be a self sacrificing hero, but I would try to just get away, undermine things, at the very least be deeply ashamed of it.
But why are those people just ok living in a country like this ? Is it really true what they say that Russia is stuck in an endless cycle of autocracy because of the character of it’s people ? How do you not feel responsible for the actions of the state that you pay for, that represents you in the world. All it’s neighbors except for Belarus, has been limping towards a place where at least nobody can have you killed on command. It’s not utopia, but more or less people feel like they can take actions against the ruling elite without major consequences . So why not them ? They are european too, they are just normal people from the ones I met so far. I don’t get it.
9 commenti
It’s time for an open windows for Putin… we still can it call “suicide”.
This is exactly why pre-trial detention is one of the most vicious tools of state repression in the world. You do not even need to convict someone if you can just break them in a cell first. Pushing an artist to suicide before he ever sees a judge is just state-sanctioned murder disguised as legal procedure!
The terrifying part is how normalized this tactic is becoming globally to crush dissent and political opposition. We are seeing Turkey weaponize the courts with prison sentences to sideline the Mayor of Istanbul. In Albania, an EU candidate country, the state literally locked the Mayor of Tirana in pre-trial detention for over a year without a single conviction.
When a government can throw you in a cage indefinitely without proving you did anything wrong, you do not live in a free society.
>Andrey Akuzin, 53, was found hanged in his cell at a detention facility in the Far Eastern city of Komsomolsk-on-Amur.
The exact russian Far-East city where it is ok for Chinese workers to protest, but for locals, it’s a big no-no, they get their faces beaten into the mud even if they are elderly women.
You can never trust Russia when it comes to these things. People always mysteriously die in obvious ways and Russia feigns ignorance
Window was left open in his detention cell
Them open windows be windowing.
Just like Epstein. Something tells me there was no camera footage available in this case either.
Russia doing russian things
I wonder if we are as different as it feels. I could never live in such a society. I wouldn’t be a self sacrificing hero, but I would try to just get away, undermine things, at the very least be deeply ashamed of it.
But why are those people just ok living in a country like this ? Is it really true what they say that Russia is stuck in an endless cycle of autocracy because of the character of it’s people ? How do you not feel responsible for the actions of the state that you pay for, that represents you in the world. All it’s neighbors except for Belarus, has been limping towards a place where at least nobody can have you killed on command. It’s not utopia, but more or less people feel like they can take actions against the ruling elite without major consequences . So why not them ? They are european too, they are just normal people from the ones I met so far. I don’t get it.