Home » “He had no malicious intent”: fans of the “Russian world” are being re-educated in Kazakhstan

“He had no malicious intent”: fans of the “Russian world” are being re-educated in Kazakhstan

by alex

"Had no malicious intent

In Kazakhstan, a man was forced to sketch the letter Z/Channel 24 Collage

In Kazakhstan, a fan of the “Russian world” drew a symbol of the Russian occupiers on his car – the letter Z. After this, those who were concerned began to re-educate the adherent of the Putin regime.

Videos of how men were forced to apologize for their actions and sketch aggressive symbols are distributed by Telegram channels. In the published footage, a fan of the “Russian mayor” is trying in every possible way to justify himself, reports24 Channel.

The letter Z allegedly meant “surname”

A man drew the letter Z on his VAZ 21011 car. However, it had to be sketched quickly, since such symbolism was not appreciated in Kazakhstan.

The adherent of the “Russian world” began to make excuses that he depicted the letter of the Russian invaders on his car, because his last name, Zinoviev, begins with it. The man also made an excuse that he allegedly depicted Z there temporarily because he was going to paint the car. This case was delayed, so he drove with this letter on the car doors.

Once again I ask you to forgive me, since I had no malicious intent,” the man justifies himself.

How fans of the so-called “special operation” are being re-educated in Kazakhstan: watch the video

Russia is trying to recruit foreigners for war

In Kazakhstan and Armenia, you can increasingly see an advertisement offering to sign a contract with the Russian Ministry of Defense. This is how the occupiers are trying to recruit foreigners to fight against Ukraine.

I offer them insane salaries of several thousand dollars, a simplified procedure for obtaining Russian citizenship and many more “unique opportunities.” Obviously, no one takes this “bait”, so the Kremlin resorts to more familiar methods – blackmail.

For example, migrants from Uzbekistan were sent to temporarily occupied Mariupol for construction work. When they arrived in the Donetsk region, their documents were taken away and they were sent to the front. The exploitation of foreign citizens allows the Kremlin to attract additional personnel to its military operations despite mounting casualties. There are now about 6 million migrants from Central Asia on Russian territory, all of them can become potential “recruits” into the Russian army.

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