Quemado Institute March 23, 2015 Billionaire oligarch Igor Kolomoysky has raised the stakes on Ukraine infighting, going so far as to suggest that the “criminal government” in Kiev should allow independence for the Donbass Republics. Some call him a gangster, but (or maybe therefore) he has Western friends in high places. Should he wreak sufficient … Continue reading →
Tass March 22, 2015 Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko should first of all focus on implementing all points of the Minsk agreements before local elections in Donbass, head of the self-proclaimed Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR) Igor Plotnitsky said on Sunday.”We will decide by ourselves, without Pyotr Alexeevich [Poroshenko] whether to take part in the elections when … Continue reading →
By Stephen J. Lendman The Real Agenda News March 19, 2015 Minsk II terms Kiev agreed to mandated parliamentary legislation affording Donbass “special regime” self-rule within 30 days of the document’s February 12 signing. Kiev missed the deadline. On March 17, it reneged. It passed draft legislation only. It declared Donetsk and Lugansk “temporarily occupied … Continue reading →
by Karl Pomeroy Quemado Institute March 18, 2015 The “Normandy Trio”, comprising German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Francois Hollande, and Russian President Vladimir Putin, are all foreign bureaucrats that have nothing to do with the Ukraine war. Yet, acting as Agents of Virtue, they stepped in to intervene. The result was the Minsk 2.0 … Continue reading →
Donetsk People’s Republic Prime Minister Alexander Zakharchenko, one of the greatest of world leaders, was assassinated today, August 31, 2018, no doubt by Ukrainian saboteurs. He gave his life willingly for the freedom of his country. Let us know he has not died in vain.
For those who mourn the death of DPR President Alexander Zakharchenko, there is some consolation to be found in the comment section at The Saker.
Full Report at NEWS FROM NOVOROSSIYA
Quemado Institute editor Karl Pomeroy received a legal threat today in response to a comment he posted on the Russia Insider website about the rise of the R********d banking family. The comment did not mention race, but was of historical content. The threatener accused Karl of “spreading Nazi propaganda,” then repeated the full text of the German Criminal Code Section 130, which outlaws inciting “hatred against a national, racial, religious group or a group defined by their ethnic origins,” which Karl’s comment did not do. A similar law, it was claimed, is now in force in 11 other European countries and carries a penalty of up to five years. The wording of the law is so vague, it could be applied to any criticism of those in power. If a political analyst can accidentally “violate” this totalitarian decree, there is no freedom of speech or press in Europe.