Antares
Respected Leader
Joku tuossa aikaisemmin kommentoi että Navalnyn murha ei horjuta Venäjää - tosin mistä näin ehdottoman varma tieto ja tulevaisuuden ennuste on peräisin, sitä sopii pohtia.
Lilliputin itse ja Kreml laajemmin on selvästi huolissaan mahdollisista seuraamuksista koska tämän mukaan ruumista ei luovuteta hautaamista varten, ei ennen "presidentinvaaleja" ja mahdollisesti ei koskaan (mikä olisi poikkeuksellista Venäjällä).
The Kremlin will not give Navalny's body to his family until after the presidential election or never at all
The Kremlin is now trying to silence the mourning for Navalny because he could "spoil" Putin's re-election in March. Because of this, the authorities fear a public funeral for the opposition figure.
The Kremlin are even considering the unprecedented option of never releasing Navalny's body at all. As a justification for hiding the corpse, the Kremlin may refer to the fact that the state has the right to dispose of the body of a person convicted of "terrorism" at its discretion. Similarly, the authorities can do the same with the body if its burial threatens the spread of dangerous diseases.
The IC has so far launched an investigation into Navalny's death, which allows 30 days (just until the end of the election) for the body not to be given away. In the next two weeks, the politician's body will be under some kind of "chemical examination."
Source: The Moscow Times
Lilliputin itse ja Kreml laajemmin on selvästi huolissaan mahdollisista seuraamuksista koska tämän mukaan ruumista ei luovuteta hautaamista varten, ei ennen "presidentinvaaleja" ja mahdollisesti ei koskaan (mikä olisi poikkeuksellista Venäjällä).
The Kremlin will not give Navalny's body to his family until after the presidential election or never at all
The Kremlin is now trying to silence the mourning for Navalny because he could "spoil" Putin's re-election in March. Because of this, the authorities fear a public funeral for the opposition figure.
The Kremlin are even considering the unprecedented option of never releasing Navalny's body at all. As a justification for hiding the corpse, the Kremlin may refer to the fact that the state has the right to dispose of the body of a person convicted of "terrorism" at its discretion. Similarly, the authorities can do the same with the body if its burial threatens the spread of dangerous diseases.
The IC has so far launched an investigation into Navalny's death, which allows 30 days (just until the end of the election) for the body not to be given away. In the next two weeks, the politician's body will be under some kind of "chemical examination."
Source: The Moscow Times