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[Jenayah]
Presiden Chechnya berikrar akan menghapuskan umat gayah pd penghujung Mei
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Chechnya president vows to eliminate all gay men by the end of May
At least four men have been killed
Chechnya president vows to eliminate all gay men by the end of MayRamzan Kadyrov is the Head of the Chechen movement
21 April 2017 by Stefanie Gerdes
Chechnya’s president has vowed to ‘eliminate’ all gay men by the end of May.
Ramzan Kadyrov, head of the Chechen Republic, threatened to rid the area of homosexuality ‘by Ramadan’.
Ramadan, Islam’s holy month, begins on 26 May this year.
Speaking to Gay Star News, a Foreign and Commonwealth Office spokesperson confirmed these claims.
The horrifying threat was revealed in Parliament when Sir Alan Duncan, Deputy Foreign Secretary and gay Conservative MP, took urgent questions on the Chechnya’s treatment of gay and bi men.
‘He [Kadyrov] has carried out other violent campaigns in the past, and this time he is directing his efforts at the LGBT community,’ Duncan said in parliament.
‘Sources have said that he wants the community eliminated by the start of Ramadan.’
Kadyrov reportedly made the chilling threats in local Russian language media.
In the last two weeks horrifying reports of gay men being held in concentration camps and being beaten, tortured, and killed have emerged. At least 100 have been detained and at least four men have been murdered.
‘Credible reports suggesting that at least four people have been killed and many have been tortured are particularly shocking,’ Duncan continued.
‘Statements by the regional government in Chechnya which appear to condone and incite violence against LGBT people are utterly despicable.’
The question was raised by Labour MP Stephen Doughty, who recounted one man’s horrifying account of being tortured with a ‘home-made’ electric chair.
‘President Putin already has a record of persecuting the LGBT communuty and takes a keen eye in Chechnya,’ Doughty said.
‘So is he taking a blind eye or is he complicit in the action of President whose spokesperson, let’s remember this, said “you cannot detain people who simply do not exist”?’
Duncan said Chechnya’s ‘arbitrary detention and ill treatment of over 100 men’ on the basis of their sexuality was ‘of deep concern’ to the British government.
‘We in the government fully condemn this,’ he said.
‘We do use all engagement with Russia to make our voice clear.’
http://www.gaystarnews.com/article/chechnya-president-vows-eliminate-gay-men-may/
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jadi ko cadang nak bunuh mereka?
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Edited by pyropura at 25-4-2017 05:45 AM
ejans replied at 25-4-2017 04:40 AM
Wowww. Bagusss nyaaa..
Malaysiaa now dah smakin bertambah ummah LGBT ni... Sampai x maluu announce ... Dont worry, si Kadirov ni akan bunuh apa saja bende yg bergerak di depannya...
....Ramzan Kadyrov: Chechen warlord accused of brutal rule
When Chechnya’s ruler Ramzan Kadyrov ordered his security forces last week to open fire on any Russian policeman who appeared on his territory without prior approval, he openly stated a rule that many of his subjects have suffered under for several years: inside the North Caucasus republic, he, and he alone, is master.
Even though war officially ended six years ago, the Chechen republic continues to be one of the most violent places in Russia.
Local residents and human rights advocates accuse the former warlord of imposing a brutal rule. There are frequent disappearances and killings and no avenues for redress.
“This is a kind of island which lies outside of the reach of Russian law. It will be done as Kadyrov or those close to him say,” says a Chechen human rights activist who asked to remain anonymous because his group has been the target of attacks.
He added that Russian president Vladimir Putin had “given our republic as a fiefdom to Ramzan. He is now the only lord and father. He submits to nobody but Putin, and Putin doesn’t want chaos here.”
The conflict in Chechnya began when the republic tried to secede from Russia after the Soviet Union fell apart in 1991. Over the course of two brutal wars which ended with the suppression of this secessionist cause, the insurgency has morphed into a jihadi uprising and spread all over the North Caucasus.
Since a group of Islamist insurgents launched an armed attack in downtown Grozny last December, the regime is cracking down even harder. In the Naursky district north of Grozny, seven young men were abducted in December. Family members of two of them say they know who took them and which police station they were taken to, but their lawyer was told that they had been taken elsewhere.
Several more disappeared from Groznensky, a rural district surrounding the regional capital. They have yet to be found.
Born October 1976, his father was Akhmad Kadyrov, who as chief mufti declared jihad against Russia during first Chechen war.
In the first Chechen war of 1994-96, Mr Kadyrov fought against Russia together with his father.
At the beginning of the second Chechen war in 1999 he and his father sided with Moscow. After restoration of federal government in 2000, Mr Kadyrov became chief bodyguard for his father, who became head of the Chechen republic.
After his father’s assassination in 2004, Mr Kadyrov became deputy prime minister and in 2006 prime minister.
In February 2007, Russian president Vladimir Putin installed Mr Kadyrov as head of the Chechen Republic, replacing Alu Alkhanov.
Other small groups of young men have been abducted from areas all over the country.
Separately, security forces rounded up the relatives of those involved in the December 4 attack, burnt down their houses and expelled them from the country.
In February, three people were killed in an explosion in an industrial area of Grozny. According to two local human rights activists, the authorities said the three were suicide bombers, arrested their relatives, held them for two days and on the third day expelled them from the republic.
The police have also gone after anyone whose contact was found on the phones of the alleged suicide bombers. Five are still unaccounted for, and two died while under arrest. They were buried in secret and their families have been forbidden from talking about their deaths. But according to local human rights workers, the two died from torture during questioning.
“Kadyrov has total carte blanche to do inside the republic whatever he wants. Everything is allowed,” says Sergei Babinets, a member of a joint mobile group of Russian human rights organisations which rotates activists through Chechnya.
“If he wants to burn houses, he burns houses. If he wants to conduct mass cleansings, he conducts mass cleansings. If he wants to kill someone, he kills someone.”
Those who speak up almost always pay a high price. After the Joint Mobile Group criticised violence against the families of suspected insurgents, their office in Grozny was torched. A month later, masked men stormed the office of Memorial, another rights group in the Chechen town of Gudermes and intimidated staff there.
The climate of fear further undermines the constitutional and legal institutions of the Russian state in Chechnya.
“There is a huge number of torture cases where people know who took the victim away and where the victim is being held. But the investigator in charge of the case does not call the perpetrators for questioning, does not detain them, and does not pass the case on to the prosecution. Judges never call these perpetrators as witnesses,” says Mr Babinets.
“They have told us directly: if I call this [policeman] for questioning today, they’ll come for me tomorrow. The judges, prosecutors, investigators are just afraid.”
According to Mr Babinets, not a single case of torture or abduction on which his group filed a complaint has been taken up by a Chechen court since the group started work in 2009.
The dysfunctionality of the legal system has encouraged many Chechens to seek help abroad. There is a rising tide of complaints about torture and disappearances to the European Court of Human Rights. While the court often struggles to find enough evidence of torture, it has awarded damages to Chechens whose family members disappeared in the hands of the security apparatus.
In this context, Moscow tidies up after Mr Kadyrov.
Mr Babinets says the fines included in the Strasbourg court’s rulings against the Grozny authorities are always paid — by the federal government in Moscow. “But the remaining parts of the verdicts, which often call for a proper investigation, are never implemented,” he adds. |
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pyropura replied at 25-4-2017 05:42 AM
Dont worry, si Kadirov ni akan bunuh apa saja bende yg bergerak di depannya...
....Ramzan ...
Bukan teroris ni yg pi letupkn diri dlm keretapi di rusia dulu? Mohon maampus semua teroris ni. |
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Inikah ajaran agama samawi yg peaceful sis? peaceful my ass jah
@chazey @dani_rox |
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depa tak anut agama keamanan.... depa nie syiah
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x aih... deme ajak gi masjid... mengimarahkan ramadan |
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LGBT ni cam lipas....hapuskan jer |
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agama keamanan & kasih sayang
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finesse replied at 25-4-2017 07:15 AM
Inikah ajaran agama samawi yg peaceful sis? peaceful my ass jah
@chazey @dani_rox
Mungkin mereka mencontohi perangai barbaric nabi2 Samawi dalam Bible zaman pre Yesus. |
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hapuskan aja..makin kuat plak melaung2 geng2 lgbt nih.... |
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apa lagi warga chechnya. ayuh packing baju mintak asylum kat usa,canada,new zealand dan certain countries kat europe. ko jangan minta asylum kat uk pulak. uk susah nak menang. canada paling senang nak menang. negara kat eu paling senang netherland. siap menteri dan mp dah buat meeting dengan statement yg president chechnya keluarkan. kiranya senang nak menang lah.
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siap bersedia dengan soalan "prove to us that you're gay or lesbian" kalau ada video mengeseks atau pics beromen, bawak sekali. bukti tu.
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