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Current Events in Russia

Here's a timeline of Navalny. I got from Associated Press (MSM):
June 4, 1976 — Navalny is born in a western part of the Moscow region.



1997 — Graduates from Russia’s RUDN university, where he majored in law; earns a degree in economics in 2001 while working as a lawyer.

2004 — Forms a movement against rampant overdevelopment in Moscow, according to his campaign website.

2008 — Gains notoriety for alleging corruption in state-run corporations, such as gas giant Gazprom and oil behemoth Rosneft, through his blogs and other posts.

2010 — Founds RosPil, an anti-corruption project run by a team of lawyers that analyzes spending of state agencies and companies, exposing violations and contesting them in court.

2011 — Establishes the Foundation for Fighting Corruption, which will become his team’s main platform for exposing alleged graft among Russia’s top political ranks.

December 2011 — Participates in mass protests sparked by reports of widespread rigging of Russia’s parliamentary election, and is arrested and jailed for 15 days for “defying a government official.” March 2012 — Following President Vladimir Putin’s reelection and inauguration, mass protests break out in Moscow and elsewhere. Navalny accuses key figures, including then-Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov and Chechnya’s strongman leader, Ramzan Kadyrov, of corruption.

July 2012 — Russia’s Investigative Committee charges Navalny with embezzlement involving Kirovles, a state-owned timber company in the Kirov region, while acting as an adviser to the local governor. Navalny rejects the allegations as politically motivated.

December 2012 — The Investigative Committee launches another probe into alleged embezzlement at a Navalny-linked Russian subsidiary of Yves Rocher, a French cosmetics company. Navalny again says the allegations are politically motivated.

2013 — Navalny runs for mayor in Moscow — a move the authorities not only allow but encourage in an attempt to put a veneer of democracy on the race that is designed to boost the profile of the incumbent, Sergei Sobyanin.

July 2013 — A court in Kirov convicts Navalny of embezzlement in the Kirovles case, sentencing him to five years in prison. The prosecution petitions to release Navalny from custody pending his appeal, and he resumes his campaign.

September 2013 — Official results show Navalny finishes second in the mayor’s race behind Sobyanin, with 27% of the vote, after a successful electoral and fundraising campaign collecting an unprecedented 97.3 million rubles ($2.9 million) from individual supporters.

October 2013 — A court hands Navalny a suspended sentence in the Kirovles case. February 2014 — Navalny is placed under house arrest in connection with the Yves Rocher case and banned from using the internet. His blog continues to be updated regularly, presumably by his team, detailing alleged corruption by various Russian officials.

December 2014 — Navalny and his brother, Oleg, are found guilty of fraud in the Yves Rocher case. Navalny receives a 3 ½-year suspended sentence, while his brother is handed a prison term. Both appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.

December 2015 — Navalny’s Foundation for Fighting Corruption releases its first long-form video — a YouTube documentary called “Chaika,” which means “seagull” in Russian but is also the last name of then-Prosecutor General Yury Chaika. The 44-minute video accuses him of corruption and alleged ties to a notorious criminal group and has piled up 26 million views on YouTube. Chaika and other Russian officials deny the accusations.

February 2016 — The European Court of Human Rights rules that Russia violated Navalny’s right to a fair trial in the Kirovles case, ordering the government to pay his legal costs and damages.

November 2016 — Russia’s Supreme Court overturns Navalny’s sentence and sends the case back to the original court in the city of Kirov for review.

December 2016 — Navalny announces he will run in Russia’s 2018 presidential election.

February 2017 — The Kirov court retries Navalny and upholds his five-year suspended sentence from 2013.

March 2017 — Navalny releases a YouTube documentary accusing then-Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of corruption, getting over 7 million views in its first week. A series of anti-graft protests across Russia draw tens of thousands and there are mass arrests. Navalny tours the country to open campaign offices, holds big rallies and is jailed repeatedly for unauthorized demonstrations.

April 27, 2017 — Unidentified assailants throw a green disinfectant in his face, damaging his right eye. He blames the attack on the Kremlin.

October 2017 — The European Court of Human Rights finds Navalny’s fraud conviction in the Yves Rocher case to be “arbitrary and manifestly unreasonable.”

December 2017 — Russia’s Central Electoral Commission bars him from running for president over his conviction in the Kirovles case, a move condemned by the EU as casting “serious doubt” on the election. July 2019 — Members of Navalny’s team, along with other opposition activists, are barred from running for Moscow city council, sparking protests that are violently dispersed, with thousands arrested. Navalny’s team responds by promoting the “Smart Voting” strategy, encouraging the election of any candidate except those from the Kremlin’s United Russia party. The strategy works, with the party losing its majority. 2020 — Navalny seeks to deploy the Smart Voting strategy during regional elections in September and tours Siberia as part of the effort.

Aug. 20, 2020 — On a flight from the city of Tomsk, where he was working with local activists, Navalny falls ill and the plane makes an emergency landing in nearby Omsk. Hospitalized in a coma, Navalny’s team suspects he was poisoned.

Aug. 22, 2020 — A comatose Navalny is flown to a hospital in Berlin.

Aug. 24, 2020 — German authorities confirm Navalny was poisoned with a Soviet-era nerve agent. After he recovers, he blames the Kremlin, an accusation denied by Russian officials.

Jan. 17, 2021 — After five months in Germany, Navalny is arrested upon his return to Russia, with authorities alleging his recuperation abroad violated the terms of his suspended sentence in the Yves Rocher case. His arrest triggers some of the biggest protests in Russia in years. Thousands are arrested.

Feb. 2, 2021 — A Moscow court orders Navalny to serve 2 ½ years in prison for his parole violation. While in prison, Navalny stages a three-week hunger strike to protest a lack of medical treatment and sleep deprivation.

June 2021 — A Moscow court outlaws Navalny’s Foundation for Fighting Corruption and about 40 regional offices as extremist, shutting down his political network. Close associates and team members face prosecution and leave Russia under pressure. Navalny maintains contact with his lawyers and team from prison, and they update his social media accounts.

Feb. 24, 2022 — Russia invades Ukraine. Navalny condemns the war in social media posts from prison and during his court appearances.

March 22, 2022 — Navalny is sentenced to an additional nine-year term for embezzlement and contempt of court in a case his supporters rejected as fabricated. He is transferred to a maximum-security prison in Russia’s western Vladimir region.

July 2022 — Navalny’s team announces the relaunch of the Anti-Corruption Foundation as an international organization with an advisory board including Francis Fukuyama, Anne Applebaum, and the European Parliament member and former Belgian Prime Minister Guy Verhofstadt. Navalny continues to file lawsuits in prison and tries to form a labor union in the facility. In response, penitentiary officials start regularly placing him in solitary confinement over purported disciplinary violations such as failing to properly button his garment or to wash his face at a specified time.

2023 — Over 400 Russian doctors sign an open letter to Putin, urging an end to what it calls abuse of Navalny, following reports that he was denied basic medication after getting the flu. His team expresses concern about his health, saying in April he had acute stomach pain and suspected he was being slowly poisoned.

March 12, 2023 — “Navalny,” a film about the attempt on the opposition leader’s life, wins the Oscar for best documentary feature.

April 26, 2023 — Appearing on a videolink from prison during a hearing, Navalny says he was facing new extremism and terrorism charges that could keep him behind bars for the rest of his life. He adds sardonically that the charges imply that “I’m conducting terror attacks while sitting in prison.”

June 19, 2023 — The trial begins in a make-shift courtroom in the Penal Colony No. 6 where Navalny is being held. Soon after it starts, the judge closes the trial for the public and the media despite Navalny’s demand to keep it open.

July 20, 2023 — The prosecution in its closing arguments asks the court to sentence Navalny to 20 years in prison, the politician’s team reports. Navalny says in a subsequent statement that he expects his sentence to be “huge … a Stalinist term,” referring to the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin.
 
Here's a timeline of Navalny. I got from Associated Press (MSM):
If this timeline is true, he's clearly been done diirty. The various corruption charges and convictions against him seem completely bogus, like the cases against Trump.

Poisoning him with nerve gas, then charging him with parole violation and imprisoning him for it when he went to Germany for treatment seems particularly shameless.

On the other hand, there is video of him meeting with forieign agents, which makes him a traitor. However clean he was when he started his career, he was dirty in that video.

Then you have the timing of his murder with his estranged wife helping the western establishment milk the event for maximum propaganda, which seems preplanned and staged by the west, with her collusion.

These details were left out of the timeline, unsurprisingly.
 
In Russia and Ukraine people are going crazy over new Russian mini series, Slovo Patzana/Слово Пацана: Кровь на Асфальте, Man's Word: Blood on the Asphalt (or Boy's Word). The stuff is good, if you can find it in English highly recomend. It's about child gangs of the 80s in Tatarstan in Russia.






I'm watching it now. It's a great serie.
 
Is there a significant long-term damage from that dark period of the 90s that the Russians went through, or has their society recovered all of its sanity since?
 

Russia moves to outlaw ‘the international LGBT movement’ as extremist organisation​

The Russian Justice Ministry has filed a motion with the country’s Supreme Court to categorise the “international LGBT movement” an extremist organisation, it emerged on Friday.

The statement, published on the ministry’s website, says that the activities of the “LGBT movement” were found to “incite social and religious discord” without specifying how. Nor was the term “international LGBT movement” defined.




Good news from Russia.
 
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Was reading reports that ISIS is claiming responsibility. My first thought was whoever did it was backed by the CIA. Of course, we know that certain powers will do anything to destabilize Russia, so it makes sense.

I’m waiting for Putin’s response, haven’t people realized that you can’t just keep poking the bear? The Western powers are really hellbent and drunk off arrogance.
 
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Many members of the North Caucasus diaspora (Chechens, Ingush, etc) living in the west, fought in the ranks of ISIS in the past. And now, some of them (those who survived Syria) are fighting in ukraine.
 
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Was the USA aware ahead of time and if so will Russia retaliate?


Knowing about something, and not sharing intelligence is not a crime - we are under no obligation to warn Russia, and neither are they (however I remember that Russia was sharing their intelligence about the Tsarnaev brothers, but that was in the past).
As for Russian retaliation - as long as there is no direct proof linking the assailants with the US gov, Russia won't take any actions against America. And we can assume, in advance, that there was a long line of intermediaries between the terrorists and their western handlers - if there were any western handlers involved in the first place, the CIA/MI6 could have easily just give a green light to the ukrainian military intelligence agency to carry out this attack without getting their own hands dirty.
 
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Either way, the CIA / MI6 does have a pretty strong intelligence apparatus and it’s more sophisticated than the FSB. Russia should have really picked up that an attack was coming on it’s own soil, whether backed or not by the CIA, the fact that they had picked some up some chatter on foreign soil before the Russians did locally, seems embarrassing.
 
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Was reading reports that ISIS is claiming responsibility. My first thought was whoever did it was backed by the CIA. Of course, we know that certain powers will do anything to destabilize Russia, so it makes sense.

I’m waiting for Putin’s response, haven’t people realized that you can’t just keep poking the bear? The Western powers are really hellbent and drunk off arrogance.
It's basically an open secret that ISIS is just a globohomo proxy force.
 
Either way, the CIA / MI6 does have a pretty strong intelligence apparatus and it’s more sophisticated than the FSB. Russia should have really picked up that an attack was coming on it’s own soil, whether backed or not by the CIA, the fact that they had picked some up some chatter on foreign soil before the Russians did locally, seems embarrassing.
That's only if You assume it was a genuine haji attack.
But if it was an operation planned by the ukrainian military intelligence (GUR) with CIA/MI6 blessing, then the number of people who knew what was going to happen was small, and they weren't the type of people to chat.
 
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