mercredi 16 mars 2022

The Russian anti-war Marina Ovsiannikova sentenced to a fine and released This release proves that Putin is afraid of a Russian revolution and that he panicked to create a martyrdom that millions of Russians would have wanted to free by the revolution !

 By Julie Amadis
with Yanick Toutain
#IpEaVaEaFaF
March 15, 2022









The Russian anti-war Marina Ovsiannikova sentenced to a fine and released This release proves that Putin is afraid of a Russian revolution and that he panicked to create a martyrdom that millions of Russians would have wanted to free by the revolution !




On Monday, March 14, Marina Ovsyannikova, a Russian citizen, brandished a sign against her own government in the middle of a television news on which it was written:

“Stop the war. Don’t believe the propaganda. They lie to you here. The Russians are against the war”

She was facing 15 years in prison, but she ended up being fined and released. That means Putin panicked. He avoided creating a martyrdom that millions of Russians would have wanted to free through the revolution.

Marina Ovsyannikova was a producer at Channel One, a very popular media outlet. She said she was ashamed to have participated in Putin’s pro-war propaganda.

 In a pre-recorded video published after her gesture, the 40-year-old said she regretted having participated in spreading "Kremlin propaganda" by working for a media linked to the Russian state for several years.


"I’m ashamed of it now," she said.BFM

She also denounced the absurdity of a war against Ukrainians who are friends of the Russians. 


"My father is Ukrainian, my mother is Russian. They were never enemies. The necklace I’m wearing is a symbol of the need for Russia to immediately stop this fratricidal war. Our fraternal people can still make peace", she said, a necklace in the colors of Ukraine around the neck." BFM

There are many anti-war Russians. A Russian state poll conducted on 28 February 2022, the first week of war, shows a significant percentage of Russians opposed to war, 22% opposed to war and 10% undecided.

"Some 68% of Russians interviewed by the Pan-Russian Center for the Study of Public Opinion (VTsIOM) support "a military operation in Ukraine", according to results published on Monday, against 22% of negative opinions and 10% of undecided." Yes, 22% is a lot, says the institute on its Telegram channel, almost surprised, and we should all work together to explain to them that Moscow had no other choice." France Info

 Yanick Toutain wrote from the first day of the war that, if Putin was at war, it was out of fear that a popular revolution would break out in Russia - what he called Vladimir Putin’s "Kazakh syndrome" in his tweets since February 24.


.... ou le #KazahSyndrome en anglais....


Kazakhs rioted massively in January 2022 demanding the resignation of President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev and his government. Putin followed closely this revolt repressed in blood, 225 dead at least, thousands of civilians wounded, 9,900 arrests at least, fearing that it would cause contagion and lead the Russians to demand his resignation in the street.


According to David Teurtrie, researcher at the National Institute of Oriental Languages and Civilizations (Inalco), the crisis is being closely monitored by the Russian government Kazakhstan is one of Russia’s main partners as a member of the Eurasian Economic Union and the Collective Security Treaty Organization. The country has almost a quarter of its citizens of Russian origin concentrated in the northern part of the border with Russia. It is the longest continuous land border in the world and Kazakhstan is a stable buffer state between Russia and South Central Asia Wikipedia


Like Nicholas II, Putin waged war out of fear of a revolution.

Putin’s reaction to Marina Ovsyannikova proves that to stop the war, it takes revolution.



If the Russians of 2022 do as those of 1917, constitute soviets by taking again the improvements that we have integrated there with the delegates revocable 1 for 25, Putin will suffer the same fate as Nicholas II, a revolution !




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