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#dmitry — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #dmitry, aggregated by home.social.

  1. L'ex presidente russo ha usato frasi molto pesanti per riferirsi al probabile nuovo cancelliere tedesco.

    #FriedichMerz #Dmitry #Medvedev

    buff.ly/rvQMJzf

  2. We have identified the man behind the curtain as Lt. Gen. #Dmitry #Minaev
    and can now reveal a trove of fresh details about the unit that he runs:
    the Department for Counterintelligence Operations.

    Known as #DKRO, it is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime.

    The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West.

    Among our findings:

    DKRO has played an enormous and unreported role in plunging Russia into its biggest wave of repression since the demise of Joseph Stalin,
    including a purge of the Defense Ministry after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine faltered.

    The department was ordered to secure the release from Germany of Vadim Krasikov,
    a Russian hit man convicted in the 2019 assassination of a Putin enemy in a Berlin park.

    DKRO then accelerated a campaign of arresting American citizens on Russian soil, including basketball star Brittney Griner.

    DKRO used former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan and me as trade bait to secure the release of Krasikov.

    Among DKRO’s other missions was to harass and surveil Western diplomats in Russia,
    even pressuring students in the U.S. Embassy high school to spy on their classmates.

    Though it numbers only about 2,000 officers, according to U.S. and European officials,
    DKRO is the Kremlin’s most elite security force.

    It wields the power to compel hundreds of thousands of personnel across Russia into surveilling, intimidating,
    or arresting foreigners and the Russians it suspects of working with them.

    DKRO officers are generously paid, even by the standards of Russia’s powerful and sprawling Federal Security Service, or FSB, of which it is part.

    They enjoy bonuses for successful operations and access to low-cost mortgages,
    even the best time slots at Russia’s beachside resorts.

    Not a single DKRO officer is known to have defected to the West, according to U.S. and European officials.
    msn.com/en-us/news/world/track

  3. We have identified the man behind the curtain as Lt. Gen. #Dmitry #Minaev
    and can now reveal a trove of fresh details about the unit that he runs:
    the Department for Counterintelligence Operations.

    Known as #DKRO, it is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime.

    The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West.

    Among our findings:

    DKRO has played an enormous and unreported role in plunging Russia into its biggest wave of repression since the demise of Joseph Stalin,
    including a purge of the Defense Ministry after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine faltered.

    The department was ordered to secure the release from Germany of Vadim Krasikov,
    a Russian hit man convicted in the 2019 assassination of a Putin enemy in a Berlin park.

    DKRO then accelerated a campaign of arresting American citizens on Russian soil, including basketball star Brittney Griner.

    DKRO used former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan and me as trade bait to secure the release of Krasikov.

    Among DKRO’s other missions was to harass and surveil Western diplomats in Russia,
    even pressuring students in the U.S. Embassy high school to spy on their classmates.

    Though it numbers only about 2,000 officers, according to U.S. and European officials,
    DKRO is the Kremlin’s most elite security force.

    It wields the power to compel hundreds of thousands of personnel across Russia into surveilling, intimidating,
    or arresting foreigners and the Russians it suspects of working with them.

    DKRO officers are generously paid, even by the standards of Russia’s powerful and sprawling Federal Security Service, or FSB, of which it is part.

    They enjoy bonuses for successful operations and access to low-cost mortgages,
    even the best time slots at Russia’s beachside resorts.

    Not a single DKRO officer is known to have defected to the West, according to U.S. and European officials.
    msn.com/en-us/news/world/track

  4. We have identified the man behind the curtain as Lt. Gen. #Dmitry #Minaev
    and can now reveal a trove of fresh details about the unit that he runs:
    the Department for Counterintelligence Operations.

    Known as #DKRO, it is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime.

    The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West.

    Among our findings:

    DKRO has played an enormous and unreported role in plunging Russia into its biggest wave of repression since the demise of Joseph Stalin,
    including a purge of the Defense Ministry after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine faltered.

    The department was ordered to secure the release from Germany of Vadim Krasikov,
    a Russian hit man convicted in the 2019 assassination of a Putin enemy in a Berlin park.

    DKRO then accelerated a campaign of arresting American citizens on Russian soil, including basketball star Brittney Griner.

    DKRO used former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan and me as trade bait to secure the release of Krasikov.

    Among DKRO’s other missions was to harass and surveil Western diplomats in Russia,
    even pressuring students in the U.S. Embassy high school to spy on their classmates.

    Though it numbers only about 2,000 officers, according to U.S. and European officials,
    DKRO is the Kremlin’s most elite security force.

    It wields the power to compel hundreds of thousands of personnel across Russia into surveilling, intimidating,
    or arresting foreigners and the Russians it suspects of working with them.

    DKRO officers are generously paid, even by the standards of Russia’s powerful and sprawling Federal Security Service, or FSB, of which it is part.

    They enjoy bonuses for successful operations and access to low-cost mortgages,
    even the best time slots at Russia’s beachside resorts.

    Not a single DKRO officer is known to have defected to the West, according to U.S. and European officials.
    msn.com/en-us/news/world/track

  5. We have identified the man behind the curtain as Lt. Gen. #Dmitry #Minaev
    and can now reveal a trove of fresh details about the unit that he runs:
    the Department for Counterintelligence Operations.

    Known as #DKRO, it is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime.

    The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West.

    Among our findings:

    DKRO has played an enormous and unreported role in plunging Russia into its biggest wave of repression since the demise of Joseph Stalin,
    including a purge of the Defense Ministry after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine faltered.

    The department was ordered to secure the release from Germany of Vadim Krasikov,
    a Russian hit man convicted in the 2019 assassination of a Putin enemy in a Berlin park.

    DKRO then accelerated a campaign of arresting American citizens on Russian soil, including basketball star Brittney Griner.

    DKRO used former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan and me as trade bait to secure the release of Krasikov.

    Among DKRO’s other missions was to harass and surveil Western diplomats in Russia,
    even pressuring students in the U.S. Embassy high school to spy on their classmates.

    Though it numbers only about 2,000 officers, according to U.S. and European officials,
    DKRO is the Kremlin’s most elite security force.

    It wields the power to compel hundreds of thousands of personnel across Russia into surveilling, intimidating,
    or arresting foreigners and the Russians it suspects of working with them.

    DKRO officers are generously paid, even by the standards of Russia’s powerful and sprawling Federal Security Service, or FSB, of which it is part.

    They enjoy bonuses for successful operations and access to low-cost mortgages,
    even the best time slots at Russia’s beachside resorts.

    Not a single DKRO officer is known to have defected to the West, according to U.S. and European officials.
    msn.com/en-us/news/world/track

  6. We have identified the man behind the curtain as Lt. Gen. #Dmitry #Minaev
    and can now reveal a trove of fresh details about the unit that he runs:
    the Department for Counterintelligence Operations.

    Known as #DKRO, it is at the very core of Putin’s opaque wartime regime.

    The story of how it got there reveals much about how Russia’s autocratic system became entangled in a broiling conflict with the West.

    Among our findings:

    DKRO has played an enormous and unreported role in plunging Russia into its biggest wave of repression since the demise of Joseph Stalin,
    including a purge of the Defense Ministry after Putin’s invasion of Ukraine faltered.

    The department was ordered to secure the release from Germany of Vadim Krasikov,
    a Russian hit man convicted in the 2019 assassination of a Putin enemy in a Berlin park.

    DKRO then accelerated a campaign of arresting American citizens on Russian soil, including basketball star Brittney Griner.

    DKRO used former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan and me as trade bait to secure the release of Krasikov.

    Among DKRO’s other missions was to harass and surveil Western diplomats in Russia,
    even pressuring students in the U.S. Embassy high school to spy on their classmates.

    Though it numbers only about 2,000 officers, according to U.S. and European officials,
    DKRO is the Kremlin’s most elite security force.

    It wields the power to compel hundreds of thousands of personnel across Russia into surveilling, intimidating,
    or arresting foreigners and the Russians it suspects of working with them.

    DKRO officers are generously paid, even by the standards of Russia’s powerful and sprawling Federal Security Service, or FSB, of which it is part.

    They enjoy bonuses for successful operations and access to low-cost mortgages,
    even the best time slots at Russia’s beachside resorts.

    Not a single DKRO officer is known to have defected to the West, according to U.S. and European officials.
    msn.com/en-us/news/world/track

  7. @fulelo @EugeneMcParland

    Novaya Gazeta Journalist Diagnosed With Brain Injury, Multiple Fractures After Attack In Chechnya

    "#Milashina is in Moscow in hospital. Her condition is, frankly, difficult. She was really severely beaten," #Dmitry #Muratov, the editor in chief of the independent newspaper #Novaya #gazeta, told AFP.

    The journalist said in the video that around 10 to 15 attackers had beaten her with plastic pipes.

    She said that authorities routinely used such pipes to attack detainees in Chechnya, and that she had written about the practice before.

    "It is a powerful weapon," she said in the video. "It really hurt."

    Since 2000, Novaya gazeta has seen six of its journalists and contributors killed.

    Muratov, co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, suspended the newspaper’s operations in March 2022 after receiving warnings from state communications regulator Roskomnadzor regarding its coverage of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

    Milashina, 45, who covers rights abuses in #Chechnya for Russia's top independent newspaper, Novaya gazeta, received a #brain #injury, bruises, and up to 14 #fractures in her hands in the beating, Novaya gazeta said on July 5 after she was examined in a Moscow clinic.

    Milashina is conscious and in stable condition, Novaya gazeta Europe said, citing doctors. The condition of #Nemov, who was stabbed in the leg, has not been reported.

    The newspaper released pictures of Milashina showing both her hands bandaged. The attackers also shaved her head and doused green antiseptic on her face and head.

    Milashina noted that the attackers grabbed her equipment but didn’t touch cash and other valuables that she and Nemov had with them, leaving her certain that the attack was #directly #related to their #professional #work in Chechnya.

    rferl.org/a/chechnya-milashina

  8. @fulelo @EugeneMcParland

    Novaya Gazeta Journalist Diagnosed With Brain Injury, Multiple Fractures After Attack In Chechnya

    "#Milashina is in Moscow in hospital. Her condition is, frankly, difficult. She was really severely beaten," #Dmitry #Muratov, the editor in chief of the independent newspaper #Novaya #gazeta, told AFP.

    The journalist said in the video that around 10 to 15 attackers had beaten her with plastic pipes.

    She said that authorities routinely used such pipes to attack detainees in Chechnya, and that she had written about the practice before.

    "It is a powerful weapon," she said in the video. "It really hurt."

    Since 2000, Novaya gazeta has seen six of its journalists and contributors killed.

    Muratov, co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, suspended the newspaper’s operations in March 2022 after receiving warnings from state communications regulator Roskomnadzor regarding its coverage of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

    Milashina, 45, who covers rights abuses in #Chechnya for Russia's top independent newspaper, Novaya gazeta, received a #brain #injury, bruises, and up to 14 #fractures in her hands in the beating, Novaya gazeta said on July 5 after she was examined in a Moscow clinic.

    Milashina is conscious and in stable condition, Novaya gazeta Europe said, citing doctors. The condition of #Nemov, who was stabbed in the leg, has not been reported.

    The newspaper released pictures of Milashina showing both her hands bandaged. The attackers also shaved her head and doused green antiseptic on her face and head.

    Milashina noted that the attackers grabbed her equipment but didn’t touch cash and other valuables that she and Nemov had with them, leaving her certain that the attack was #directly #related to their #professional #work in Chechnya.

    rferl.org/a/chechnya-milashina

  9. @fulelo @EugeneMcParland

    Novaya Gazeta Journalist Diagnosed With Brain Injury, Multiple Fractures After Attack In Chechnya

    "#Milashina is in Moscow in hospital. Her condition is, frankly, difficult. She was really severely beaten," #Dmitry #Muratov, the editor in chief of the independent newspaper #Novaya #gazeta, told AFP.

    The journalist said in the video that around 10 to 15 attackers had beaten her with plastic pipes.

    She said that authorities routinely used such pipes to attack detainees in Chechnya, and that she had written about the practice before.

    "It is a powerful weapon," she said in the video. "It really hurt."

    Since 2000, Novaya gazeta has seen six of its journalists and contributors killed.

    Muratov, co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, suspended the newspaper’s operations in March 2022 after receiving warnings from state communications regulator Roskomnadzor regarding its coverage of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

    Milashina, 45, who covers rights abuses in #Chechnya for Russia's top independent newspaper, Novaya gazeta, received a #brain #injury, bruises, and up to 14 #fractures in her hands in the beating, Novaya gazeta said on July 5 after she was examined in a Moscow clinic.

    Milashina is conscious and in stable condition, Novaya gazeta Europe said, citing doctors. The condition of #Nemov, who was stabbed in the leg, has not been reported.

    The newspaper released pictures of Milashina showing both her hands bandaged. The attackers also shaved her head and doused green antiseptic on her face and head.

    Milashina noted that the attackers grabbed her equipment but didn’t touch cash and other valuables that she and Nemov had with them, leaving her certain that the attack was #directly #related to their #professional #work in Chechnya.

    rferl.org/a/chechnya-milashina

  10. @fulelo @EugeneMcParland

    Novaya Gazeta Journalist Diagnosed With Brain Injury, Multiple Fractures After Attack In Chechnya

    "#Milashina is in Moscow in hospital. Her condition is, frankly, difficult. She was really severely beaten," #Dmitry #Muratov, the editor in chief of the independent newspaper #Novaya #gazeta, told AFP.

    The journalist said in the video that around 10 to 15 attackers had beaten her with plastic pipes.

    She said that authorities routinely used such pipes to attack detainees in Chechnya, and that she had written about the practice before.

    "It is a powerful weapon," she said in the video. "It really hurt."

    Since 2000, Novaya gazeta has seen six of its journalists and contributors killed.

    Muratov, co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, suspended the newspaper’s operations in March 2022 after receiving warnings from state communications regulator Roskomnadzor regarding its coverage of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

    Milashina, 45, who covers rights abuses in #Chechnya for Russia's top independent newspaper, Novaya gazeta, received a #brain #injury, bruises, and up to 14 #fractures in her hands in the beating, Novaya gazeta said on July 5 after she was examined in a Moscow clinic.

    Milashina is conscious and in stable condition, Novaya gazeta Europe said, citing doctors. The condition of #Nemov, who was stabbed in the leg, has not been reported.

    The newspaper released pictures of Milashina showing both her hands bandaged. The attackers also shaved her head and doused green antiseptic on her face and head.

    Milashina noted that the attackers grabbed her equipment but didn’t touch cash and other valuables that she and Nemov had with them, leaving her certain that the attack was #directly #related to their #professional #work in Chechnya.

    rferl.org/a/chechnya-milashina

  11. @fulelo @EugeneMcParland

    Novaya Gazeta Journalist Diagnosed With Brain Injury, Multiple Fractures After Attack In Chechnya

    "#Milashina is in Moscow in hospital. Her condition is, frankly, difficult. She was really severely beaten," #Dmitry #Muratov, the editor in chief of the independent newspaper #Novaya #gazeta, told AFP.

    The journalist said in the video that around 10 to 15 attackers had beaten her with plastic pipes.

    She said that authorities routinely used such pipes to attack detainees in Chechnya, and that she had written about the practice before.

    "It is a powerful weapon," she said in the video. "It really hurt."

    Since 2000, Novaya gazeta has seen six of its journalists and contributors killed.

    Muratov, co-winner of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, suspended the newspaper’s operations in March 2022 after receiving warnings from state communications regulator Roskomnadzor regarding its coverage of Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

    Milashina, 45, who covers rights abuses in #Chechnya for Russia's top independent newspaper, Novaya gazeta, received a #brain #injury, bruises, and up to 14 #fractures in her hands in the beating, Novaya gazeta said on July 5 after she was examined in a Moscow clinic.

    Milashina is conscious and in stable condition, Novaya gazeta Europe said, citing doctors. The condition of #Nemov, who was stabbed in the leg, has not been reported.

    The newspaper released pictures of Milashina showing both her hands bandaged. The attackers also shaved her head and doused green antiseptic on her face and head.

    Milashina noted that the attackers grabbed her equipment but didn’t touch cash and other valuables that she and Nemov had with them, leaving her certain that the attack was #directly #related to their #professional #work in Chechnya.

    rferl.org/a/chechnya-milashina

  12. Die Kundgebung ist trotzt sehr unangenehmen Wetter gut besucht und Nachbar*innen aüssern beim Vorbeilaufen auch ihre Unterstützung. Es stimmt, was die Nachbar*innen sagen, die das hier organisieren: zusammen sind wir mehr! #DmitryBleibt , und #Zwangsraümungen gehören verboten.
    ---
    RT @EmmausWald
    Unser Nachbar #Dmitry steht vor der #Räumung. Wir finden unerträglich, dass die Gesetzeslage dies zulässt und protestieren dagegen.
    #Zwangsräum
    twitter.com/EmmausWald/status/

  13. Die Kundgebung ist trotzt sehr unangenehmen Wetter gut besucht und Nachbar*innen aüssern beim Vorbeilaufen auch ihre Unterstützung. Es stimmt, was die Nachbar*innen sagen, die das hier organisieren: zusammen sind wir mehr! #DmitryBleibt , und #Zwangsraümungen gehören verboten.
    ---
    RT @EmmausWald
    Unser Nachbar #Dmitry steht vor der #Räumung. Wir finden unerträglich, dass die Gesetzeslage dies zulässt und protestieren dagegen.
    #Zwangsräum
    twitter.com/EmmausWald/status/

  14. Die Kundgebung ist trotzt sehr unangenehmen Wetter gut besucht und Nachbar*innen aüssern beim Vorbeilaufen auch ihre Unterstützung. Es stimmt, was die Nachbar*innen sagen, die das hier organisieren: zusammen sind wir mehr! #DmitryBleibt , und #Zwangsraümungen gehören verboten.
    ---
    RT @EmmausWald
    Unser Nachbar #Dmitry steht vor der #Räumung. Wir finden unerträglich, dass die Gesetzeslage dies zulässt und protestieren dagegen.
    #Zwangsräum
    twitter.com/EmmausWald/status/

  15. Die Kundgebung ist trotzt sehr unangenehmen Wetter gut besucht und Nachbar*innen aüssern beim Vorbeilaufen auch ihre Unterstützung. Es stimmt, was die Nachbar*innen sagen, die das hier organisieren: zusammen sind wir mehr! #DmitryBleibt , und #Zwangsraümungen gehören verboten.
    ---
    RT @EmmausWald
    Unser Nachbar #Dmitry steht vor der #Räumung. Wir finden unerträglich, dass die Gesetzeslage dies zulässt und protestieren dagegen.
    #Zwangsräum
    twitter.com/EmmausWald/status/

  16. Am Mariendorfer Weg in #Neukölln muss #Dmitry immer noch um seine ganze Lebensgrundlage fürchten. Gestern wurde seiner Vermieter*innen dieses Brief übergeben. Die Kündigung sollen sie zurücknehmen! Ihr könnt den Brief noch hier unterschreiben. change.org/p/offener-brief-an-

  17. Am Mariendorfer Weg in #Neukölln muss #Dmitry immer noch um seine ganze Lebensgrundlage fürchten. Gestern wurde seiner Vermieter*innen dieses Brief übergeben. Die Kündigung sollen sie zurücknehmen! Ihr könnt den Brief noch hier unterschreiben. change.org/p/offener-brief-an-

  18. Am Mariendorfer Weg in #Neukölln muss #Dmitry immer noch um seine ganze Lebensgrundlage fürchten. Gestern wurde seiner Vermieter*innen dieses Brief übergeben. Die Kündigung sollen sie zurücknehmen! Ihr könnt den Brief noch hier unterschreiben. change.org/p/offener-brief-an-

  19. Am Mariendorfer Weg in #Neukölln muss #Dmitry immer noch um seine ganze Lebensgrundlage fürchten. Gestern wurde seiner Vermieter*innen dieses Brief übergeben. Die Kündigung sollen sie zurücknehmen! Ihr könnt den Brief noch hier unterschreiben. change.org/p/offener-brief-an-