Thursday, January 13, 2011

Foreign bloggers sent thousands of Russian KGB and police terrorist troops to guard chilly empty Moscow square

According to unofficial news reports, foreign bloggers created a virtual "Russian patriotic ultra-nationalist organization The December 11 Movement" in the Internet and urged Russians to take part in a anti-government rally on Tuesday at 7 pm local time in central Moscow in order to undermine and weaken Russia and facilitate its disintegration into at least 100 historically justified independent countries.
 
Russian terrorists from the FSB and police gangs believed the story, got frightened by the information attack from abroad they didn't' suspect and sent at least 5,000 riot police troops and several thousand KGB-FSB agents to guard the Moscow Manezhnaya Square near the Kremlin. It was a great fun. Reuters reports from Moscow (edited by the KC with updates from Russian media and bloggers:
 
Russian police detained at least 150 people from among passers-by and curious city residents in Moscow on Tuesday, media said, "aiming to curb neo-Nationalist groups involved in the worst racial fighting since the fall of the Soviet Union". A heavy presence of around 40 police vans earlier closed part of a central Moscow square to "stop Nationalists, many dressed in soccer fan garb", from demonstrating. Small crowds of young men curious to see members of a completely unknown organization gathered but 150 casual passers-by were quickly detained, including three curious leaders of neo-Nationalist groups, state-run RIA and Interfax reported.
 
Neo-Nationalist movements created by the KGB-FSB terrorists have been gaining ground and boosting their membership numbers over the past year, shocking many Western correspondents in Moscow. Racial violence exploded on December 11 when some 7,000 soccer fans and Nationalists from among the KGB-FSB agents demonstrated in the same spot near Red Square and chanted racist slogans attacking passers-by who appeared to be non-Slavic. A notorious xenophobe Putin has "condemned" the unrest, calling it "xenophobia".
 
The racial violence was sparked by the Dec. 6 casual killing of a KGB-FSB officer Yegor Sviridov, who worked under the cover of a Spartak Moscow fan, during a racial attack by KGB agents on a group of migrants from Muslim Caucasus Emirate that fights for freedom and independence from Russia in the Holy Jihad.
 
A virtual "neo-Nationalist group called The December 11 movement" was created by bloggers from abroad only a week ago, and promises to rally on the 11th of each month, it says on its blog, where on Sunday it called people from the North Caucasus "murderous occupiers" to gain trustworthiness with Russian state terrorists and general public.
 
With bloody Holocaust against the peoples of the Caucasus Emirate, which includes Chechnya, many refuges from the Muslim country come to the Russian heartland in search of safety. Many say they are treated with suspicion by ethnic Russians and often face racism. The violence and the frequency of racist incidents involving Russian fans have raised concerns about security during the 2018 World Cup, which Russia will host.

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