Tag: murdered’:
My dad was murdered by Putin’s thugs after he stood up to Vlad’s evil plans
THE daughter of an opposition leader to Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he was brutally gunned down when he stood up to the dictator’s evil plans.
Journalist Zhanna Nemtsova, 38, is the daughter of Boris Nemtsov, who was assassinated outside the Kremlin in 2015.
Zhanna’s dad Boris Nemtsov, who was assassinated in 2015, was a vocal critic of Vladimir Putin[/caption]
Zhanna said Putin wanted to ‘get rid’ of anyone who could mobilise public opinion[/caption]
Nemtsov had served as the Deputy Prime Minister under the previous president Boris Yeltsin in the late 90s.
He was a vocal opponent of Putin and spoke out about Russia’s invasion of Crimea, calling it “senile insanity”.
“I see a clear link, it’s now even clearer to me and to many observers, that my father was killed because he quickly understood Vladimir Putin’s plans”, she told CNN.
Nemtsova added: “I think that was one of the triggers, but my father was also generally very critical of Putin and he was a very powerful voice that could mobilise public opinion.”
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His ability to mobilise public opinion, Nemtsova believes, was a key factor which led to his death.
Nemtsova said: “It was very important. Putin wanted to get rid of all those who were able to mobilise the population, to make them act.”
Nemtsov remembers in 2014 telling her father that things were “getting dangerous” and Putin had “crossed the red line” and it would be dangerous for him to carry on working in Russia.
He decided not to listen to her and remain in the country.
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She says her dad understood early on that Putin would wage a war against Ukraine.
When asked why she thought there was no viable opposition to Putin in Russia, Nemtsova replied: “People are intimidated. They don’t want to speak. I doubt the majority of people support the war in Ukraine.
“They keep calm because they are afraid. They know about the repression in Russia.
“They don’t want to go to jail and the prevailing sentiment in Russia is hopelessness.
“People don’t want to do anything but they want the war to stop.”
Nemtsova also warned that there were was no one speaking out about the war as many opponents to Putin were now languishing in jail.
INVESTIGATION INTO DEATH
In March this year, a new investigation into Nemtsov’s death revealed he was assassinated after being shadowed by an agent linked to a Kremlin hit squad.
A report from investigative websites Bellingcat and the The Insider, working with the BBC, has revealed Nemstov was tailed by a Russian agent they name as Valery Sukharev.
The prime suspect in the murder Ruslan Geremeyev was pictured in Mariupol, where the 43-year-old is part of the Chechen contingent fighting there.
According to the investigation, Sukharev tailed Nemstov on at least 13 journeys while he served with Russia’s main security agency, the FSB.
The information was obtained through flight and train reservations recorded in an FSB database called Magistral, which the investigators have been able to obtain via corrupt officials.
After Nemstov’s murder a team of five men of Chechen origin were arrested and then jailed.
But his family has repeatedly asked investigators to look into Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov’s possible involvement.
Their lawyer Vadim Prokhorov also called for Geremeyev, who was the commander of the police unit in which one of those convicted served, to face questioning.
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Prokhorov has named Geremeyev as the person he believed to have been behind the killing.
Geremeyev was declared a suspect at the end of 2015 but he never faced questioning and he later reportedly fled to Abu Dhabi.
Boris Nemtsov had served under Boris Yeltsin[/caption]
Zhanna says she warned her dad in 2014 that things were ‘getting dangerous’[/caption]
Evil killer who murdered Rosie May Storrie, 10, and attacked two other schoolgirls could be freed from jail in weeks
A KILLER who suffocated a 10-year-old schoolgirl at a Christmas party could be freed within weeks.
Evil Paul Smith was jailed for life with a minimum term of 14 years after he smothered Rosie May Storrie at a festive gathering in 2003.
Rosie May Storrie, 10, was tragically killed at a Christmas party in December 2003[/caption]
Her vile killer Paul Smith could now be freed after being granted a parole hearing[/caption]
The monster, who was 17 at the time of the murder, had previously attacked two other young girls – both of whom did not press charges.
He has now been granted a parole hearing in early December, almost two decades after he was put behind bars, the Mirror reports.
It means Smith could be walking the streets in time for Christmas, cruelly close to the 20th anniversary of little Rosie May’s death.
The talented ballet dancer had fatefully attended a party with her family thrown by friends near their home in Leicestershire on December 28, 2003.
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Nottingham Crown Court heard how vile Smith had shown an interest in the “pretty and bubbly” 10-year-old.
He was the last person seen with her before she was found smothered in a bedroom by her devastated dad Graham.
Her mother Mary, a nurse, desperately tried to revive Rosie May and performed mouth-to-mouth, before she was rushed to hospital.
But the schoolgirl sadly passed away two days later after suffering catastrophic brain damage.
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Smith, who has Asperger’s, denied murder but was convicted by a jury in October 2004.
During his sentencing, it was revealed that the sick teen had also previously attacked two terrified girls.
On one occasion, he had threatened a 16-year-old pal with an air rifle and taped her mouth and legs before bundling her into the boot of a car.
He later released the girl before swerving away and crashing into another vehicle.
It was also revealed Smith had sickeningly attacked a 12-year-old girl.
The judge branded him “a considerable danger to young girls” when sentencing him to a minimum of 14 years.
In 2014, Smith lost an earlier appeal against his conviction.
The Parole Board has now confirmed the case is due to be heard in an oral hearing.
It’s still surreal. It has taken all these years for those memories not to be there constantly at the forefront of my mind.
Mary Storrie
Grief-stricken mum Mary previously told the Daily Mail: “It’s still surreal. It has taken all these years for those memories not to be there constantly at the forefront of my mind.
“People say time is a healer, but I don’t think it is. That gut-wrenching rawness can come back in an instant.
“But somehow you build the resilience to get you through every day.”
The former nurse, 61, and husband Graham, 64, launched the Rosie May Foundation to help children across the globe.
They were holidaying in South East Asis when the horror 2004 Boxing Day tsunami hit – but miraculously survived.
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Inspired by their tragedy, the couple then raised the cash to build an orphanage for children affected by the disaster in Sri Lanka.
It was tenderly named Rosie May’s Home, in dedication to their beloved daughter.
Mary and Graham Storrie tragically found their daughter unconscious in a bedroom[/caption]
Smith could be walking the streets before the 20th anniversary of Rosie May’s death[/caption]