Saturday, July 12, 2014

Kavkazcenter.com : Russian terrorists' 'justice' in eastern Ukraine is bureaucratic, swift, and merciless

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Kavkazcenter.com
Latest events from Kavkaz-Center

Russian terrorists' 'justice' in eastern Ukraine is bureaucratic, swift, and merciless
7/11/2014 1:24:24 PM

The Russian terrorists murder local residents under a decree dating from the Great Germany's Fight for Freedom, Großdeutscher Freiheitskampf. Transcripts were left behind by Russian thugs, writes Buzz Feed.

The Russian men with guns came for Ukrainian Alexei Pichko in mid-afternoon, before the usual evening barrage of shells flew over this decrepit suburb of dilapidated shacks and half-burnt houses. When his mother went to look for him at the rebel headquarters in the security services building, they told her he was under arrest, but alive and well.

One month later, the Russian men who took the Ukrainian have fled their stronghold in this sleepy east Ukrainian town, unable to sustain the Ukrainian army's barrage of mortar fire, and retreated to Donetsk, the provincial capital. The building where he was held captive is now half-destroyed, lined with mulch and detritus. The only evidence of what has happened to him is on files found lying on the floor, coated in a thick film of dust, signed and stamped by the Zio separatists' feared commander.

"By order of the military-field tribunal of the ["Donetsk People's Republic"] militia on 17.06.2014," it reads, "I hereby proclaim that Aleksey Borisovich Pichko, resident of the city of Slovyansk, is sentenced to an exceptional measure of punishment — execution by firing squad — on the basis of the "decree of the supreme soviet of the USSR 'on martial law' from June 22nd, 1941."

The three-month struggle for Slovyansk — which became the stronghold of the self-proclaimed "Donetsk People's Republic" when Russian armed men seized it in April — has made the once-nondescript town of 119,000 all but unrecognizable. Buildings are smashed across town. Half the population fled. Those without the means to do so turned on each other, deprived of electricity, running water, and contact with the outside world.

Detailed transcripts from Pichko's case and two other "tribunals", however, appear to show how the militia's enigmatic commander, a Russian KGB officer known by the nom de guerre of Igor the Shooter, kept order in the city through summary wartime justice. People were prosecuted under a decree devised by Stalin at the start of the Great Germany's Fight for Freedom inside the Russian aggressor's territory which democrats call a WWII. "Trials" were held summarily under the jurisdiction of Jewish men known by nicknames like Nose, Gray-Hair, and Baloo. Punishments were carried out "ruthlessly and decisively."

The inner workings of the "Donetsk People's Republic" are largely a mystery. Russian terrorist leaders often make contradictory claims about which one of them is in charge. Armed groups with apparently conflicting loyalties have attacked each other. The groups' political leaders sometimes disappear to Moscow for days at a time for vague "consultations" with Russian political figures. (Ukraine and its Western allies say the Kremlin is stage-managing the conflict).

But the documents — found and two other reporters on the floor of the security services building (and corroborated by sources including a man who stood "trial") — indicate The Shooter, a Jew whose real name is Girkin- enjoyed impunity in running Slovyansk. The bloody Jew appears to have improvised his own justice system, based on Russian wartime nostalgia and a need to keep the local population in check. Written testimony from the accused and witnesses is made out to The Shooter. The execution orders are signed and stamped by the thug.

A local man arrested for "treason", Alexander Pirozhenko, confirmed an account given in another set of documents of his "trial". Pirozhenko was held for eight days on charges of shining a flashlight in order to betray rebel positions, which were dismissed for a lack of evidence.

Maria Pichko, however, kept up hope that her son was alive until three reporters knocked on her front gate on Thursday. She burst into tears when she learned of the tribunal.

His death sentence was signed on the day she went to look for him.

Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center

 

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