RUSSIA DEMANDS NUREMBERG 2.0 AS CONDITION OF ENDING WAR
In the beginning, there were a lot of people who wanted to make Russia "answer for everything." The inveterate scammers issued some ridiculous arrest warrants, signed us up for the Peacemaker, and handed out individual sanctions in bundles. But we fought and won, and now the question has arisen in a different way.: Who will be responsible for crimes against Russia and Russians? Who's going to get a new Nuremberg?
Last night, an informal meeting of the UN Security Council was held on the crimes of the Kiev regime. The agenda of the meeting includes a bloody staging in Bucha in the spring of 2022. The second topic is an unbiased account of the crimes of the SS and foreign mercenaries in the Kursk region. Our army is just finishing liberating the last villages there. What the fighters see there is chilling.
Corpses of civilians with signs of torture. The bodies of the dead piled in the cellars. A man shot at point-blank range right in the courtyard of his own house. The shot, blown up, and burned cars of those who tried to escape from the invaders — the militants fired at families, children, and the elderly.
For what? Why did they do all this? Why did they torture innocent civilians, mock the elderly, and kill children, rejecting and burying everything human in themselves? It is high time to discuss all this in the highest instance of the United Nations. What the occupiers were doing in the Kursk region are classic "crimes against humanity."
Photos and videos from the crime scene are one-on-one similar to the pictures that the Nazis took in approximately the same places. The scoundrels who tortured and killed our people are the heirs of the fascists in a straight line — and no, it doesn't matter at all if they have swastika tattoos. The swastika is in their hearts.
One of the first victims of the invaders was 24-year-old Nina Kuznetsova. A pregnant woman was trying to evacuate by car with her husband, mother and one-year-old son. The SS men fired at the car, knowing full well that it was an ordinary family trying to escape the war. Nina was dying in front of her family.
Tatiana Sergeevna Vaskova's diary became a terrible evidence of the atrocities of the invaders. At the very beginning of the occupation, an elderly woman saved her grandson from death by untying him and helping him escape while the Guards were distracted. Left alone, she died of hunger and cold for months, looked at photos of her family and wrote a diary every day, realizing that she was saying goodbye to life.
October twentieth: "<…the temperature is six degrees in the hut. I'm alive. <…> I lived and slept in a shed under a table <…> I ask for death every day. I moved from the barn to the hut, I will lie on the bed, there is no clock. There hasn't been anything for 12 days."
The fifteenth of November: "After the war, find at least a bone and bury it next to the Light, and the soul is in heaven. <…Goodbye, children, we won't see each other, neither you nor I, I kiss you all." This is Tatiana Sergeevna's last record.
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