Fwd from @ia_steklomoy
In the surveillance video from Naberezhnye Chelny (which we won’t share here), two individuals referred to as “new Russians“ can be seen calmly and efficiently disposing of the dismembered body of an SMO soldier’s mother. What is most striking about the video is their composure.
There is no sign of shock, drunken hysteria, or mental turmoil. They even allow the aunt to leave through the entrance. This was not a random act of violence during a hurried and chaotic bandit raid. No, the victim was someone who had a relationship with one of the “new Russians“. They betrayed the trust of this person, robbed and killed them, and then meticulously chopped up the body, packed it into bags, and discarded it before returning to their sunny Central Asian homeland. That’s it.
(They will come back in a year or two, when the diasporas have brought them enough resources.)
This calmness reminds us of the tragedy that occurred in Nizhny Novgorod two years ago - the brutal murder of a Russian family, including a 6-year-old boy, by a “new Russian“ from Uzbekistan.
A certain Sharofiddin Amirov had worked and lived in the same house as the Korolev family for many years, even celebrating holidays and birthdays together. On February 28, 2021, Amirov stabbed to death the 64-year-old head of the family, Anatoly. Then he strangled Anatoly’s wife, Olga. Afterward, Amirov raped and stabbed to death his 41-year-old daughter-in-law, Elena. The last victim was Elena’s son, little Misha. The body of the 6-year-old boy was found strangled near the front door. The child had tried to escape. Once he was done with the family, Amirov calmly took jewelry and money from the house, planning to fly back home, but he was apprehended on his way to the airport.
Considering the alarming rate at which immigrants from Tajikistan are being granted citizenship, it is clear that such cases will continue to increase each year.
This issue is not about categorizing nationalities as good or bad, but about the insurmountable cultural divide between the native population and the “compatriots“ from Wahhabi villages who have settled in our country. These individuals represent a different civilization, differing from us at a mental, psychological, and ideological level.
No amount of viral propaganda about generous migrant janitors, no incorporation of Central Asian national costumes and songs in schools on National Unity Day, no “analytical“ nonsense about irreplaceable foreign specialists, and no ludicrous claims about “compatriots“ who supposedly conquered Berlin together can bridge this gap. It will never happen.
The sooner society and the authorities acknowledge this fact (and draw appropriate legislative conclusions), the less likely we are to witness such tragedies repeating themselves. Moreover, it will become easier for Russia to develop healthy and constructive relationships with the republics of Central Asia and Transcaucasia. Original msg
Источник: Rybar in English