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Author Topic:   Yelena Tregubova
neptune5
unregistered
posted June 06, 2007 08:50 PM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
quote:
Yelena Tregubova: Why I fled Putin's Russia. And why the West must appease him no longer

An open letter to the G8 from the best-selling author and prominent critic of the Putin regime
Published: 05 June 2007

I have personal experience of Vladimir Putin's regime and the way the Russian President operates. I have been forced to seek asylum in Britain for criticising the Kremlin as an independent journalist. I have come to realise that to return to my homeland would be suicidal for me.

But this letter is not about me. I am writing to you because I fear that a tragedy is befalling Russia, with the restrictions on political and personal freedoms worsening every day. Having done away with the domestic opposition, Putin, on the eve of the G8 summit, has now decided to deal with the external "enemies".

He has threatened to aim Russian missiles at targets in Europe once again, just like in the Cold War, and has warned of a nuclear arms race. It is now clear that the escalation of aggression by Kremlin is the direct result of the policy of appeasement pursued by Western leaders who, during the seven years of Putin's rule, have turned a blind eye to his lynching of the opposition, the press, NGOs and all democratic institutions in Russia.

There has been no single example in history of a dictator who, sooner or later, did not become a danger to both his close and distant neighbours.

The goal is not the "revival of Russia" or the "revival of the national pride of the Russians", as Putin and the Kremlin's propaganda are trying to present it. It is a full-scale revenge by the secret services and the authoritarian regime with all their old methods and tricks.

Putin has shut all independent TV channels, introduced harsh censorship, blocked access to the press for the democratic opposition, accused Russian human rights activists and NGOs of being Western spies, and split up the country's biggest oil company, Yukos, among his friends from the special services.

Encouraged by your non-resistance, Putin's regime has become so strong and impudent that is now directly threatening its close neighbours, Poland and the Czech Republic, former colonies of the Soviet Union, trying to speak to them as if they were its vassals. In recent months, three ambassadors - Estonian, Swedish, and British - have been affected by the actions of extremist organisations controlled by the Kremlin.

And now events have taken a logical new turn: the Kremlin is threatening the West, by missile-rattling. The critical difference between this and the Soviet era lies in the fact that then you knew exactly which side of the barricades you stood on, when you provided moral support to the opponents of dictatorship. But nowadays due to the favourable situation in oil and gas markets, Putin has the resources to buy your indulgence and silence.

You even kept silent even when Putin signed a law authorising the murder of all Russia's enemies abroad last summer. Anyone who dares to criticise Putin is put on the enemies' list.

You have started to protest now that you have suddenly realised that it will not be too easy to get off the oil and gas hook Putin forced you to swallow. The Kremlin doesn't give a damn about your words. The only thing it does give a damn about is your money.

The Kremlin, as it has already openly shown, will use brute force against peaceful demonstrators with the sole goal of preventing next year's election from being held on a free and fair basis. Putin and his close supporters are planning to restore in Russia a clan-like dictatorship resembling the former Soviet Politburo. We are reaching the point of no return.

If, following the Heiligendamm summit, you continue to shake hands with Putin as if nothing has happened, you will further strengthen Putin's feeling of complete impunity. Putin should be faced with a stark choice: either the Kremlin restores democratic freedoms, or Russia will be expelled from the G8 and other international clubs.

All free-thinking Russians are ashamed by what Putin is doing.

You must decide whether you want to sacrifice freedom in Russia on the altar of gas and oil.

About the author

Yelena Tregubova is a former member of the Kremlin press corps. Her book, Tales of a Kremlin Digger, published in 2003, accused Vladimir Putin of stifling political and press freedoms in Russia. As a result, she lost her job and was blacklisted from the Russian media. In February 2004, a bomb exploded outside her apartment, moments before she opened the door. Tregubova, 34, has now applied for asylum in Britain.



http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/article2614548.ece


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Virgo Rising 8'57, Sagittarius Sun/4thH 3'26, Pisces Moon/6thH 8'22

"Our passions are not too strong, they are too weak. We are far too easily pleased." - C.S. Lewis

"Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror." - Kahlil Gibran

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neptune5
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posted June 06, 2007 09:35 PM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
its realistically sad, that i've had 2 more threads on this material, probably more, and everyone refuses to take heed. Its like a blind flock of sheep. You only listen once you've gotten hurt. I wish that people would recognize the wrongdoing of some international powers, currently like Russia, and if only, take a personal stand against it. And most likely, being an average citizen, you won't have military control of anything; but i just urge you to acquire the dignity & fortitude to be able to at least speak out against these atrocities on a messsage board. Because its far easier for someone to take your life physically than it is to destroy your spirit and legacy. A person that displays genuine personal integrity is far more valuable than any jewel and far more powerful than any hydrogen bomb.

i know this sounds like i'm preaching, but i honestly don't mean too, and i apologize to anyone that may have felt otherwise, i'm just saying how i feel about people not responding to, what will likely develop into an international crisis.

I just feel like people who don't speak up about these things lack the humanity to do so.

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Virgo Rising 8'57, Sagittarius Sun/4thH 3'26, Pisces Moon/6thH 8'22

"Our passions are not too strong, they are too weak. We are far too easily pleased." - C.S. Lewis

"Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror." - Kahlil Gibran

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Jan_A
unregistered
posted June 07, 2007 03:04 PM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
neptune5,
I think, people don't know, what the hell is happening in Russia, that's why they keep silent. Thank you for this topic!
I agree with you, that sometimes when you keep silent, you can become an accessory of a crime. Democracy and human rights are non-existent in Putin's Russia.
Jan

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Dervish
Knowflake

Posts: 625
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posted June 21, 2007 01:42 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Dervish     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
As long as they're an ally in the "war on [some] terror," the US government will ignore any human rights abuses. Bush and friends have overlooked far worse violations with other "allies."

I keep up a bit with what goes on in Russia. I'm aware that it's pretty bad. (Some pretty bad stuff goes on in the USA, too. Though to compare them is usually like comparing apples and oranges. There is no neat "one is worse than the other," as the USA is worse in some ways and Russia worse in other ways. And not just politically.)

One thing I find refreshing about Russia is a soul weary cynicism (ie, "no BS"). Here in the USA, most people have to come up with some righteous reason and rationalizations for corruption and abuses of power. In Russia, it's more of a shrug of the shoulders and blunt honesty about it. The politicians are the only ones that seem to play the "let's pretend we're righteous" game, though I'm not sure why as there doesn't seem to be much of a point to it (though there's a strain of rampant puritanism in Russia, too, though like everything else, it's kinda like comparing apples to oranges to compare it to the rampant puritanism in the USA). I understand inflaming the nationalism, especially when like the US threatens to use WoMD in North Korea and Iran (too close to Russia's sandbox), especially given how many Russians despise Americans. Though I'm also aware it's a lot of posturing, too, when it comes to flaming the US in political speeches and rallies.

Not sure what you can do. You could appeal to the UN, but as long as Russia goes along with the corruption in the UN, I doubt they'll do much of anything. (Heck, I'm impressed when the UN can agree on what to have for lunch, and also when the UN doesn't do anything corrupt and evil themselves.)

Don't look to the US or the UN to save you, though, as it's a false hope. If either one helps you on this, it will be coincidental (like if Russia starts invading Europe, I could see the UN taking action to save its own collective butt). The US and UN are just as corrupt and abusive in their own ways, they just hide it better than the Russians bother to.


But there WAS that nice example of the "babushka revolution" I heard about (where Putin later claimed he restored benefits to the elderly, though the way I heard it when it first happened is that grannies were rioting across Russia and made Putin stain his undies after Putin was the one who cancelled all their benefits that enraged the babushkas/grannies to begin with). That's another thing I like about Russia, btw, the Russians have a respect for the elderly missing in the USA.

Still, the hope being if your babushkas can intimidate the government and affect policy, then just maybe the rest of Russia can learn from their example.

Anyway, hope Yelena Tregubova doesn't find a similar end as Anna Politkovskaya or Alexander Litvinenko.

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neptune5
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posted June 22, 2007 08:28 AM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
i'll be praying for her, she's got a beautiful name too.

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BornUnderDioscuri
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posted June 25, 2007 12:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for BornUnderDioscuri     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
LOL i dont like her last name it means "3 lips" eh

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neptune5
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posted June 25, 2007 10:45 AM           Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
well her first and middle are pretty, thats kind of what i meant:

Yelena Viktorovna (i think it sounds beautiful)

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Virgo Rising 8'57, Sagittarius Sun/4thH 3'26, Pisces Moon/6thH 8'22

"Our passions are not too strong, they are too weak. We are far too easily pleased." - C.S. Lewis

"The beauty that addresses itself to the eyes is only the spell of the moment; the eye of the body is not always that of the soul."
~George Sand

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