Posts Tagged ‘Matvienko’
Friday, March 23rd, 2007

We have met inside of Leningradski railroad station at midnight. Kasparov with his body guards, surrounded by liberal looking people from United Civic Front, as well as young, huge, skin-headed Sergei Udaltsov with his boys from Red Youth, and us - National Bolsheviks, who made more than a half of the crowd of one hundred. Later, the governor of St. Petersburg, Valentino Matvienko, would label us as “two carriages of agent-provocateurs from Moscow.”
Some groups of plain-clothed policemen were spread over Leningradski rail-road station building. We were ready to their attempt to arrest us here, in Moscow, but plainclothes policemen didn’t move when we started our move to platform. They have let us go. We boarded our train.
(more…)
Tags: Kasianov, Kasparov, Kurnosova, March of Disagrees, Matvienko, Moscow, National-Bolsheviks, Nevski Prospekt, St. Petersburg, Udaltsov, United Civic Front, Yabloko
Posted in Word of our leader | Comments Off
Thursday, January 27th, 2005
From newspaper “Trud” I have learned today that I am “small, unsignificant man, wearing ridiculous hat, slowly moving between two huge bodyguards.” Article of journalist from Briansk was printed next to article about pedophil, unmasked as teacher. As National-Bolsheviks Party becoming more and more important in political life of Russia, the more dirt throwed at me by FSB influenced-newspapers and television. Fortunately, anti-Putin’s media is stronger than pro-Putin.
(more…)
Tags: Barnaul, Beslan, Bespalov, CPRF, Ejov, FSB, Globa-Mikhailenko, Godunov, Gromov, Kaliningrad, Kazan, Klionov, Korchunski, Kremlin, Kudrin, Kutchma, Matvienko, NBP, Perm, prisoners, Putin, Saint-Petersburg, Samara, Tishin, Trud, Vladivostok, Zurabov
Posted in Word of our leader | Comments Off
Thursday, January 27th, 2005
Since the publication day of the last “General Line” issue many things have changed in our country. In dozens of Russian cities “benefits revolts” took place, where hundreds, thousands of furious pensioners came out on the streets, blocked the main streets of the cities and roads of national significance. In some cities, such as Piter, Kazan, Samara revolts lasted several days. In others they are happening now. The country is agitated. After the holidays, when they entered the metro, autobuses, trains, trolleybuses, the pensioners were faced with a cruel humiliation: the necessity to count their coins with their callous fingers, the fact that their pension booklets don’t guarantee them free rides anymore, they felt themselves last category citizens, used and cheated slaves. And the best of them, the most furious ones rebelled. This is a healthy behavior, a healthy instinct. The stupid state machine howled, stopped and backed for the first time. The angry, disappointed ministers and prosecutors hastily look for the responsible ones. And easily find them. The public prosecutor of the Samara region Mr. Efremov has declared already on January 12th that the organizers of the pensioners meeting in Samara, according to the prosecutor “are the national-bolsheviks from Edward Limonov’s party”. (more…)
Tags: CPRF, Duma, General Line, Kazan, Kommersant, Kudrin, Matvienko, National-Bolsheviks, Piter, Samara, Surkov, Zurabov
Posted in Word of our leader | Comments Off
Thursday, February 19th, 2004
The 19 February, from 14.00 to 15.00, the national-Bolsheviks picketed the office of the company “Itera” on the Sevastopoloski prospect in Moscow. The action was arranged for the birthday of the Turkmenbashi, celebrated in Turkmenia as a governmental holiday. “Itera” is one of the largest business-partners of Niazov.
(more…)
Tags: Duma, embassy, Gazprom, human rights, Itera, kalashnikov, Limonov, Matvienko, NBP, Niazov, prison, Turkmenbashi, Turkmenia
Posted in News | Comments Off