Saturday, March 22, 2014

Khatidzhe discusses her fears for Crimea's Tatars video. Khatidzhe обсуждает ее страхи для татар видео Крыма


 http://www.rferl.org/media/video/25306078.html
Stories like Khatidzhe's are depressingly uniform among Crimean Tatars, who have seen their historic claim to the Black Sea peninsula repeatedly and brutally violated ever since the territory was brought under Russian control in the late 18th century -- peaking with Josef Stalin's mass deportations in 1944.

In 1944, under the false pretext of alleged collaboration between the Crimean Tatars and the Nazis during the Nazi occupation of the Crimea in 1941–1944, the Soviet government evicted the Crimean Tatar people from Crimea on orders of Joseph Stalin and Lavrenti.

Истории, подобные Khatidzhe являются удручающе одинаковы в крымских татар, которые видели свою историческую претензии на полуострове Черного моря неоднократно и грубо нарушаются с тех пор территория была взята под контроль России в конце 18 века - пик массовых депортаций Иосифа Сталина в 1944 году.

В 1944 году, под ложным предлогом якобы сотрудничестве между крымскими татарами и нацистами во время нацистской оккупации Крыма в 1941-1944 гг, советское правительство выселены крымскотатарский народ из Крыма по приказу Иосифа Сталина и Лаврентия

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23 Mar 2014 Al Jazeera's Phil Ittner reports on the latest military movement of Russia near the border with Ukraine.Ittner said that the "sheeer size" of Russia's military might on the border with Ukraine could mean that it can roll through if they want to. He said Ukraine's military had been decimated in the last decade, and it cannot defend the country from overwhelming Russian force. 
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Published on 2 Apr 2014 Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News 
Crimea's Tatars — who amount to 12 percent of the peninsula's 2.2 million residents — overwhelmingly boycotted the March 16th referendum for Crimea to become part of Russia. The Tatar's bad history with Russia was a major factor of their decision, as Stalin persecuted and deported them en masse from the Crimean Peninsula in 1944. After the collapse of the Soviet Union Tatars trickled back into Crimea, but their status there was always temporary. With Crimea's much-disputed status as part of Russia following the referendum, the future of the Tatars is a big question mark. VICE News' Simon Ostrovsky spent some time with Tatars in Simferopol in the week leading up to the referendum to get their side of the story. Check out the VICE News beta for more: http://vicenews.com 
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Published on 4 May 2014 Tatar Spiritual leader and member of Ukrainian parliament Mustafa Dzhemilev has been denied access to enter his homeland of Crimea, provoking hundreds of Crimean Tatars in the region to protest near the Crimean border. Dzhemilev was told that he would not be allowed to enter the Russian-occupied Ukrainian territory again for another 5 years. 


Путин Случайно Сообщения Real крымских итогов выборов; Только 15% проголосовали за Аннексии