quote:
Op vrijdag 27 februari 2015 23:58 schreef Nintex het volgende:4 maanden nadat Putin KGB chef was begon het. Politieke moorden op tegenstanders van het Kremlin of Putin:
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Dan hebben we het nog niet eens over de politieke processen tegen Chordokovsky, Navalny en anderen.
Wanneer wordt het Russische volk wakker?
Duma Deputy Galina StarovoitovaIn June 2005, two hitmen, Yuri Kolchin and Vitali Akishin, were convicted of murder and sentenced to 20 and 23 years of imprisonment respectively. Akishin was named as the one who pulled the trigger and Kolchin as one who had organized the attack. On 28 September 2006, Vyacheslav Lelyavin was sentenced to 11 years in prison for his role in organizing the murder.[1] Sergey Musin, Oleg Fedosov and Igor Bogdanov are still wanted for the investigation.[11]
According to official investigation, the murder was organized by former GRU hitmen Yuri Kolchin
Sergei Yushenkov, co-chairman of the Liberal Russia political party
Four people have been convicted during a controversial trial for the murder of Sergei Yushenkov and are currently serving prison sentences. Most prominent among them is Mikhail Kodanev, a former co-chairman of the Liberal Russia party organized by Yushenkov himself. During the trial, Mikhail Kodanev strenuously claimed to be innocent. He later tried to commit suicide and was placed in the FSB's special Lefortovo prison. According to attorney Henry Reznick, Kodanev was convicted solely on the basis of the false testimony of another convicted suspect (Alexander Vinnik) who made a series of contradictory statements, including claims that Yushenkov was killed by the government.[7]
Critics also insisted that the political murders of two chairmen of the Liberal Russia party should have been considered as the same case in the court, which would make it clear that some of the suspects were wrongly accused.[8] Some observers noted that Kodanev was relatively unknown in Russian politics until he was named to Yushenkov's party by Boris Berezovsky, ostensibly to make a mockery of Vladimir Putin (Kodanev was nicknamed "Putin" because he looks very much like the President). Some Russian media claimed that it was Boris Berezovsky who organized the murder of Sergei Yushenkov through his agent Mikhail Kodanev.
Yuri Shchekochikhin a vocal opposition journalist and member of the Russian Duma and the Kovalev CommissionAt the request of the Novaya Gazeta newspaper staff, the Investigative Committee of the General Prosecutor's Office of Russia reopened the investigation into his death on 27 October 2007.[21] In April 2008 an Investigative Committee official said that there would be another test carried out on his tissue to ascertain whether there had been a case of poisoning.[22] The Prosecutor General of Russia closed the criminal case in April 2009 after the examination has failed to prove poisoning or a violent death.
Paul Klebnikov editor of the Russian edition Forbes magazineIn 2006, prosecutors accused Chechen rebel leader Khozh-Akhmed Nukhayev, subject of Klebnikov's book A Conversation with a Barbarian, of masterminding the attack. Three Chechen men—Kazbek Dukuzov, Musa Vakhayev, and Fail Sadretdinov—were arrested and tried in a closed trial for the murder, but all three were acquitted. Sadretdinov was later convicted on unrelated charges and sentenced to nine years' imprisonment, while Vakhayev and Dukuzov had their acquittals overturned by the Supreme Court of Russia, allowing them to be re-prosecuted.
Nikolai Girenko a prominent human rights defenderVladimir Popov, leader of the neo-Nazi group Russian Republic, claimed responsibility for the killing in an interview to the Agency of Journalistic Investigations on June 24, 2004. Popov said that a "death sentence" was given to Girenko by the group.[citation needed]
As of June 2005, the official investigation had found no suspects, according to the newspaper Tainy Sovetnik.[3] Yelena Ordynskaya, senior assistant to the city Prosecutor, said the investigation found that Russian Republic published its "death sentence" to Girenko a few days after the murder.[4]
The city court of Saint Petersburg sentenced 12 members of a gang led by Voevodin and Borovikov.
Andrei Kozlov First Deputy Chairman of Russia’s Central BankKozlov was near the Spartak sports center with his driver, Alexander Semyonov, when they were shot. Semyonov died at the scene and Kozlov died after doctors unsuccessfully performed emergency surgery.[3] The police later found weapons they suspect were used in the attacks: a "handmade pistol and a modified Baikal pistol... in tall grass near the Spartak sports center, 250-300 meters away from the site of the incident, during the investigation of the crime scene."[8]
Boris Gryzlov, speaker of the State Duma, the lower chamber of parliament, said, "The central bank revoked licenses of a number of banks, and it's quite possible that the gangsters linked to them might have put out a contract on him."
Anna Politkovskaya author of countless books and articles exposing Russian human rights violationsOn 5 August 2009, the prosecution service's objection to the acquittals in the Politkovskaya trial was upheld by the Supreme Court, and a new trial was ordered.[66]
In August 2011, Russian prosecutors claimed they were close to solving the murder after detaining Dmitry Pavliuchenkov, a former policeman, who they alleged was the principal organiser.[67] The following month Kommersant Daily reported that, according to Pavlyuchenkov, he was acting on instructions from businessman and Putin critic Boris Berezovsky.[68]
In December 2012 Dmitry Pavliutchenkov was found guilty and sentenced to 11 years in a high security penal colony.[69]
In May 2014 five men were convicted of murdering Politkovskaya, including three defendants who had been acquitted in a previous trial. The defendants were three Chechen brothers, one of whom was accused of shooting Politkovskaya in the lobby of her Moscow apartment building.[70] In June 2014 the men were sentenced to prison, two of them receiving life sentences. It is still unclear who ordered or paid for the contract killing.
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Alexander Litvinenko KGB defector
Russian human rights attorney Stanslav Markelov
Natalia Estemirova
Nemtsov