According to Russian journalists, the old woman described the President of Ukraine as “smart and handsome” and the Ukrainian people “well done”.
In the Russian Federation, a protocol was prepared to discredit the Russian army about 69-year-old retired Olga Slegina from Kabardino-Balkaria, who was being treated in a sanatorium. The OVD-Info Telegram channel writes that it was reported by the staff of the medical institution.
“During the conversation, Slegina said that Ukrainians are great, they defend their country, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is a smart and handsome person,” the message said.
The woman’s report was written by two waiters, along with a retired Federal Penitentiary Service employee who was in a sanatorium at the time.
According to journalists, the protocol for discrediting the Russian army contained words that Olga Slegina did not say. For example, one pensioner was credited with saying that Vladimir Zelensky would soon take over the Russian Federation, after which “everyone would feel bad.”
A few days later, representatives of law enforcement agencies arrived at the sanatorium and took Slegina to the police station. The woman was threatened with arrest and asked to give the contents of the phone.
Russian media also write that one of the police chiefs asked the woman where she was from and whether she was Ukrainian among her relatives. At the end of the interrogation, he was taken to the Nalchik city court. When it was understood that the judge was not at work, the accused was released.
On Thursday, December 29, the retiree was told by phone that he had to appear in court the next day. On December 30, the police came to the sanatorium and informed him that he had to appear in court once again.
Olga Slegina refused to attend the meeting, citing her poor health. She also mentioned that her husband had previously worked as a doctor in Federal Penitentiary Institutions.
Recall that three people were arrested for playing Ukrainian songs in public places in Crimea. Crimeans were accused of “dishonoring the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation” and publicly displaying Nazi paraphernalia or symbols.
Focus he also wrote that a local resident in Kazan was found guilty of “discrediting the Russian army” for displaying a poster that read “I love my father”. The court fined the Russian woman 30 thousand rubles.
Source: Focus
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