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dadsinsuits · 1 year
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Gennady Zyuganov
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kneedeepincynade · 1 year
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Today is victory day, today the free world celebrates victory over nazism and fascism, today the victory of socialism is celebrated by it's sons and daughters and by the few who fought and are still alive to tell the tale. Today the nazist menace has returned in force and the sons and grandsons of the heroes are fighting to defeat it! But while at the front the mighty T-90Ms roar and the flight of the geranium destroy the weapons of the nazis we must fight another battle,the battle in our homes. For the new nazis are not just far away in the Ukraine mud but also in our cities, our streets, our blocks and we must push them away and beat them every time they rise their ugly head!
For truth,for glory,for victory!
Addition to the post: declaration of comrade zyuganov of the kprf
🚩 " We are the heirs of winning fathers and grandfathers. We communists have always been at the forefront of the fighters against fascism. At one time, the Nazis started out by imitating the communists' burning down the Reichstag only to confront them, take them to concentration camps and shoot them. Then the Nazis burned Khatyn and shot hundreds of thousands of citizens of our country in Babi Yar - Russians, Ukrainians, Poles, Jews. And now they have set fire to our land, persecuting all those who oppose Nazism and fascism.
Today the main terrorists on the planet are the Americans. The main financial terrorist is the dollar. The main rapists are the Nazis, fascists and Bandera. And we must understand perfectly well that we are continuing the great work of the victorious fathers and grandfathers. Today we went through all the halls of the Victory Museum on Poklonnaya Hill, starting from Brest. And I asked the young scientist who accompanied us: what is the reason why we won? And he replied: the reason is that we defended a just cause.
When Kyiv was taken by the Nazis, the recently persecuted Cossacks volunteered at the front by the hundreds. There were offended priests, but on the first day of the war they also raised their voices against the invaders. There were those who were exiled, and yet said they would defend their beloved Soviet homeland.
Today, the same unity is required in the fight against a new invasion. And I would like Supreme Commander Putin, Defense Minister Shoigu, Prime Minister Mishustin and the leaders of the houses of parliament Matvienko and Volodin to understand that Nazism, fascism, Bandera and terrorists must be fought and fought in a real way. If they drag drones across Red Square, if talented writers are blown up in central Russia, if defenseless people in Donbass are attacked every day, then we are doing something wrong. And we have to mobilize resources as much as possible and do everything to win."
© Chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation Gennady Zyuganov
May 8, 2023
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russianreader · 2 years
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Why They Fight
I’m writing once more about the Donbas and our true goals in carrying out the SMO. Everyone should know this, given that there are still many Russians wondering what it was all for. This category of people should know that the events in Donbas did not arise in a vacuum. We are fighting not only for the liberation of peaceful people from years of Nazi tyranny. We are fighting for the future of…
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gorbachev’s funeral was a solemn affair kept purposefully small by an outsized police presence, ordered there by a regime that wants to distance itself as much as possible from his legacy but which cannot forsake something as momentous as the last general secretary of the ussr. at the same time, those in power hate the people who embrace gorbachev and what he stood for. therefore you have “elements of a state funeral,” a ridiculous amount of police, riot police, plainclothes police, military police, elaborate ways of making sure as few people show up as possible (gorbachev was supposed to lie in state until 2pm, but this was suddenly moved to noon; the burial was closed to the public, but it was actually open). one person was arrested for holding up an anti-war sign. surprisingly, many complained about putin snubbing the funeral due to “scheduling conflicts.” good riddance! who among those present really wanted to see him?
it was something of a quiet protest action against him and the war, even without posters. a pensioner at novodevichy cemetery told me as much: “this is the only way i can protest against what’s going on without getting arrested, and they know it. i couldn’t not take the opportunity.” but what is a protest if it’s sanctioned, quiet, and cordoned off?
at 9:30 am, crowds began to gather at the house of the unions in the city center, where all former soviet leaders were displayed in state. it was both larger than i’d expected and much smaller than i’d hoped for from moscow. from a city of 12 million, there were perhaps a few thousand people all together, many with red carnations. there were several gate systems to the memorial manned by cops who had orders not to let in more than 50 people at a time (i overheard one say so on his walkie-talkie). as with the the funeral procession later on, there was a good showing by the post-soviet generation and those who would’ve been too young to remember much of anything from the gorbachev years; there was also a fair amount of pensioners. the crowd moved fast—the cops didn’t want to let anyone linger for too long in any place—and after three security checkpoints and five gates, i was in the luxurious hall of pillars, though made austere for gorbachev. after seconds of looking at a man who embodied the twentieth century like few others, i was urged to move on as fast as possible. on the way out, a couple behind me, a man and a woman in their 50s, started crying. they were not the only ones.
across the street, a large “we will fulfill our mission” poster, written with the propaganda Zs and Vs, hangs on the scaffolding of the new bolshoi theatre, as if to put a period on what had already ended months, if not years ago. the crowds only became bigger when i left at half past ten. on my way to novodevichy cemetery, i ran into gennady zyuganov, head of russia’s communist party, and asked for a photo—why not. a smaller crowd of CPRF, left front, and other “left” parties gathered for some event near red square. later, i learned that he gave a speech celebrating the end of wwii with the victory over japan. zyuganov said that we must continue the fight and cleanse the earth of nazis, as russia is doing now. this, too, is part of gorby’s legacy, the shattered pieces of a massive, unfinished political project.
a few hours passed before gorbachev’s procession arrived to novodevichy, where the crowd was a bit thinner. i stood next to a young law student in his junior year who skipped his first day of classes to pay respects, chatting with him to pass the time. “how excellent that so many young people showed up,” he said. maybe a third of those gathered was under 30. “if we are here together, it means russia still has a future.” the police moved us around from time to time to “make space.” after finding my way to him again, i noticed he had two carnations instead of four: he gave two to a journalism student and exchanged numbers. a pensioner: “is she your sister? no? watch over her, keep each other safe.”
the procession was headed by a downcast dmitry muratov, a massive portrait of gorbachev in his hands: one nobel peace laureate parting with the other. among those present for the funeral service were ambassadors, including john sullivan from the US, the south korean, french, and german ambassadors, and suzanne massie, a historian who served as advisor to reagan and allegedly introduced him to the russian idiom “trust, but verify,” with pavel palazhchenko, gorbachev’s long-time translator. 
after the service, a 21-gun salute, the crowds thronging to the burial by raisa gorbachev’s grave. alexei venediktov (editor-in-chief of the now-dissolved echo of moscow, another glasnost creation) recently talked about how he went to novodevichy with gorbachev around 2010. gorbachev started crying, telling him that all he wanted now was to be buried with raisa. the love he had for her was immense. out of all the biographies and gorbachev/perestroika studies i’ve read, it’s only taubman’s that covers how profoundly he loved her with the space that such a deep, lasting relationship merited.
during the burial: “who do you think is next,” from one pensioner to another, two strangers. “well... you know.” “yes, let’s hope it happens soon.” 
a last opportunity to pay respects at a grave heaped, heaped, heaped on with roses and carnations, and then the throngs dissolved. it was the best of who and what you could see in moscow, or, russia’s conscience—what’s left of it—on public display. i have no doubt everyone at the memorial and the cemetery was anti-war. the palpable depression of this crowd was alleviated only by the reinforcing mutual presence of everyone there, a silent solidarity drawn from an organization that hasn’t been seen on the streets since march. you understand what people feel from what’s not said—the looks—the tears—the efforts of men and women in their 80s and 90s to stand for hours, so long as they could say farewell. 
the possibility of such organization, reluctantly allowed for the funeral and which was widely admissible in years passed, was the legacy with which we parted today. the defining feature of gorbachev’s rule was openness, glasnost, a gust of fresh air blowing through a hot, humid room, more than economic ideas that were a halfway house for the conditions the soviet state found itself in, and which he didn’t fully understand. yet he opened windows and doors. he returned memory to the people, he allowed memorial to form, he brought sakharov from exile, and yes, he then turned off his microphone during the congress of people’s deputies. gorbachev was a complicated, flawed individual who rose through the ranks of a bloody, ruthless bureaucracy to lead an imperial superpower whose continued survival was his overarching political imperative. he couldn’t have been gandhi. at one point, he nearly killed yeltsin with nothing more than a prolonged party criticism session; he was, directly or indirectly, responsible for the deaths of those on the imperial periphery. 
but what could have been instead? nothing is precisely inevitable. had andropov been healthier, the soviet union could’ve been held together to this day by sheer force, or perhaps by prolonged conflict in azerbaijan, or mass-scale repression in the baltics. set in this context, gorbachev leashed the security institutions of the ussr, but didn’t properly dispose of them. thirty years later, his failure is zyuganov’s gleeful speech on denazification, the descent into a fascist society waging genocidal war. his success was thirty years of lost opportunity.
where do we go from here? the feeling of helplessness predominates, resonating through the said and unsaid perception of what could have been and what we have had. the crowd goes home, the opposition stays in jail, the war continues. 
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argumate · 2 years
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Several members of the Russian State Duma expressed concern about the dire situation on the frontlines in Ukraine during the Duma’s first plenary meeting of its autumn session on September 13. Leader of the Russian Communist Party Gennady Zyuganov stated that Russia needs to announce full mobilization because the Russian “special military operation” is a war. Zyuganov said that one can end a “special military operation” at any time, but that a war can end only in victory or defeat, and “we have no right to lose” this war.  Leader of the “Fair Russia—For Truth” Party Sergey Mironov called for social “mobilization,” in which regular Russians would pay attention more to the war in Ukraine, rather than for full military mobilization.
social mobilisation, sending thoughts and prayers to the volunteer battalions fighting in Ukraine
good to see that the Russian Communist Party hasn't forgotten its roots
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warsofasoiaf · 2 years
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How would Russia be now if John M. Deutch hadn't rigged the elections in 1996 and let Gennady Zyuganov win like Russians wanted to ?
That's a conspiracy theory. Yeltsin didn't steal the election with the CIA, Clinton didn't really want to. Yeltsin and his cronies owned the media, used local governments to pressure and intimidate voters, and ignored every law in campaign finance.
Anyway, Zyuganov probably would have made a show of trying to get the poverty and corruption of the Yeltsin era under control, but largely I think Zyuganov would have followed the same track as Putin did albeit with more characteristics of the Soviet Union. The oligarchs that Zyuganov would have deemed loyal would have become the new nomenklatura and folded into the Party. Zyuganov would have probably embraced a revanchist view of Russian foreign policy and put similar pressure on post-Soviet states to join Russia in some form, either through the Union State model ala Belarus, economic and customs unions, or overt threats of invasion - the Second Chechan War happens, as does continuing to prop up and agitate pro-Russian separatist movements.
Thanks for the question, Anon.
SomethingLikeALawyer, Hand of the King
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pastdaily · 2 months
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Communist Party To Oppose Boris Yeltsin - Ukraine Heads To The Polls - Khmer Rouge At The Thai Border- March 29, 1998
Consider becoming a member: Become a Patron! https://pastdaily.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/News-March-29-1998.mp3 Busy day for politics throughout the world, this March 29, 1998. Russian Communists will seek a vote in parliament Wednesday urging President Boris Yeltsin to withdraw his nomination of Sergei Kiriyenko as prime minister, party leader Gennady Zyuganov said Monday. He said…
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shahananasrin-blog · 9 months
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[ad_1] The Kremlin is considering running media personality Alexei Venediktov as Vladimir Putin’s “liberal” rival in the 2024 presidential elections, the Vedomosti business daily reported Tuesday, citing four anonymous sources close to the presidential administration. Venediktov is the former editor-in-chief of Ekho Moskvy, a liberal-leaning radio station that was blocked by authorities days after Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022. Vedomosti’s sources describe “someone like Venediktov” as a potential opposition candidate who could attract liberal voters to the ballot next spring. Other expected challengers include veteran Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, who has regularly placed second in past campaigns; nationalist Liberal Democratic Party leader Leonid Slutsky, the successor to perennial third-place finisher Vladimir Zhirinovsky who died last year; and New People party newcomer Alexei Nechaev. “The more the elections are discussed, the higher the turnout,” argued one of Vedomosti’s anonymous sources. The Kremlin’s strategy seeks to showcase widespread support for Putin and his military campaign in Ukraine by giving him a high vote margin over other candidates that represent a wide spectrum of society. Previous reporting has suggested that the Kremlin expects Putin to win 75% of the vote at a 70% voter turnout.  Pro-Putin figures have secured similar vote shares during regional elections held earlier in September, including in the Ukrainian regions partially controlled by Russian troops. Venediktov told Vedomosti he had not been approached with the offer and would decline to run for president if he were. Vedomosti’s sources expressed confidence that a figure of similar stature would agree to stand in as a liberal opposition candidate in case of Venediktov’s refusal. Putin said last week he would decide whether to run for a fifth presidential term when the 2024 campaign officially kicks off in December. Authorities took Ekho Moskvy off the air for spreading “false information” about the Russian military as part of a wide-ranging wartime crackdown on dissent and independent media, forcing the station to close down. Venediktov was branded a “foreign agent” soon after. “Foreign agents” are not barred from running for president, but one of Vedomosti’s sources said the designation could still be removed for the 2024 presidential campaign. Ekho Moskvy had been a beacon for Russia’s democrats and liberals since its founding in 1990 during the Soviet Union’s dying days. Venediktov’s own ties to the political elite — including his role in promoting a controversial electronic voting scheme for the 2021 parliamentary elections — saw him reviled by much of Russia’s anti-Kremlin opposition. [ad_2]
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mariacallous · 9 months
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Under the leadership of Deputy Chief of Staff Sergey Kiriyenko, the Kremlin’s domestic policy team has mostly determined who will run against Vladimir Putin in the upcoming 2024 presidential election, sources tell Meduza. Kiriyenko’s staffers have carefully vetted these candidates, often described as Putin’s “sparring partners,” and one of the main selection criteria turns out to be age. Meduza special correspondent Andrey Pertsev spoke with Russian government insiders about Putin’s re-election campaign and who will be permitted to run against him.
Two Kremlin insiders have told Meduza that politicians younger than 50 were deliberately excluded from nomination, since a younger candidate on the ballot might make the voters pause and wonder if the 70-year-old Putin is still the same person “who came to power with a firm hand.”
Putin is set to run against candidates from three Russian parliamentary parties: the Communist Party (CPRF), the far-right Liberal-Democratic Party (LDPR), and the centrist New People party. Another establishment party, A Just Russia — For Truth, and its leader Sergey Mironov have already announced that instead of nominating a candidate of its own, A Just Russia will endorse Putin.
As for the CPRF, it is set to nominate its longtime leader Gennady Zyuganov. According to an informed source, “no dark horses” like Pavel Grudinin (nominated by the communists in 2018) will be let into the race this time:
The president already knows Zyuganov, who also has the high status of the party’s leader, and voters already know his name. He also comes with a built-in ceiling, since he won’t attract any new voters beyond his existing ossified electorate.
Zyuganov got 17 percent of the vote in the 2008 presidential election, and 18 percent when he ran again in 2012. This kind of predictable performance will be important in the upcoming election, given the plan to re-elect Putin with “record results” (the goal being to garner 80 percent of the vote with a turnout of 70 percent or above).
A less predictable candidate like Grudinin could easily throw a wrench into the works: this is what has already happened in 2018, when Grudinin’s ratings started to climb dangerously, forcing Putin’s administration to launch a full-fledged smear campaign. A tired presence like Zyuganov will not turn into a problem, says a United Russia campaign insider. (A recent Levada Center poll rated the public’s confidence in Zyuganov at three percent, while his party’s trust rating is 10.2 percent, according to the Russian Public Opinion Research Center.)
As envisioned by the Kremlin, the LDPR will nominate Leonid Slutsky, the party’s leader and head of the State Duma Foreign Committee. In 2018, three Russian journalists (Farida Rustamova, Darya Zhuk, and TV Rain’s Ekaterina Kotrikadze) accused Slutsky of unwanted sexual advances, but the Duma Ethics Committee found nothing wrong with the deputy’s behavior.
A source close to the President’s Administration says that Slutsky himself doesn’t mind running, “since he likes publicity.” Another speaker, familiar with the LDPR leadership confirms this impression, adding that Slutsky “likes to be seen in public” and will use the campaign “to increase his visibility.” Slutsky’s face is already on the front pages of regional newspapers, since it’s right at the top of party lists vying for seats in the regional governments. During the presidential elections, live televised debates will add to Slutsky’s public visibility, the same speaker expects.
A source with access to the Kremlin’s political strategy block describes the rationale for Slutsky’s candidacy: “He fits the bill: a serious man in a suit, with an office. No one would call him a mere election spoiler, but Slutsky’s personal ranking is low, and as a politician he sort of…” The speaker decides not to complete the sentence, letting it drift off with a shrug.
The New People party’s nomination is far less obvious at the moment. The Kremlin would like the party’s leader, the entrepreneur Alexey Nechayev, to run:
It’s the same logic as in Slutsky’s case. Here’s a serious man in a suit. He has gravitas and a certain decorum. But he is also obscure and not very charismatic, which ensures that his rating will not threaten Putin’s KPIs,
explains one of the Kremlin insiders who spoke to Meduza.
Nechayev himself, however, doesn’t seem all that interested in running: “They won’t let him garner a high percentage,” explains an informed source, “but jumping after crumbs and emerging a ‘two-percent Alexey’ doesn’t motivate him.”
“Nechayev wants the New People party to take at least third place in the 2026 State Duma election. He thinks that if he got a poor result in the presidential election, it would hurt that goal,” explains a source close to the President’s Administration.
Instead, Nechayev has proposed nominating the deputy speaker of the State Duma, Vladislav Davankov, who is currently on the Moscow mayoral ballot. But this isn’t good enough for the Kremlin, whose campaign strategists are still trying to get Nechayev to run, even though Davankov would be a perfect establishment candidate if only permitted to enter the race. “The problem is his age,” says a campaign insider:
Davankov is 39, he likes publicity and is a decent public speaker. He wouldn’t garner a big percentage, of course, but an energetic young candidate might make the voters think about the president’s age.
For Putin, the speaker is sure, “this wouldn’t be a flattering contrast.”
This isn’t so much about the immediate election results as the prospect of what might happen two or three years down the road, when people might start thinking that Putin might be a great guy, but isn’t it time for someone younger to step in. And younger candidates might well catalyze such thoughts.
According to a poll conducted in May 2023 by the research company Russian Field, “age” is the third most common answer among respondents when asked what they don’t like about the current president. The other two most frequent answers were that Putin is “too soft” (no further detail being offered) and that he pays no attention to the country’s domestic problems.
Several regional officials and members of the United Russia party nomenclature agree that Putin’s age has started to bother Russians over the past several years. People are asking questions, says a member of the United Russia leadership, rattling off a few examples: “Isn’t it time to think about a successor? Isn’t it time for Putin to relax? Maybe the country needs a new outlook?”
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piyasahaberleri · 11 months
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Bu fotoğraf Komünist Parti Lideri Oleg Khorzhan'ı gösteriyor. — Bloknot-Moldova/Dosya47 yaşındaki Oleg Khorzhan, Transdinyester'deki evinde ölü bulunmuş oldu; vurulmuş yada bıçaklanmış olabileceği ve öncelikle karısı tarafınca ölü bulunmuş olduğu, Güneş Pazartesi günü bildirildi.Gennady Zyuganov, "Oleg Khorzhan öldü... evinde öldürüldü. Derhal soruşturma başlatılmasını talep ediyoruz." Pridnestrovskiy Lesnik Telegram kanalı, "Khorzhan'ın karısı, evinin odalarından birinde açık bırakılan bir kasanın yanında cesedini buldu. Kasa boştu. Cinayetin kendisi için işlenmiş benzer biçimde görünmesi için kasayı mı açtılar?" Soygun uğruna mı? Bu oldukça saçma olur."Khorzhan, 1.500 Rus ordusu "sulh gücü" tarafınca korunan bir millet olan Transdinyester'de Komünist Parti lideri olarak vazife yapmış oldu ve bir kamu görevlisine saldırmaktan dört yıl hapis cezasına çarptırıldıktan sonrasında, Rus yanlısı politikacı Moskova'nın desteğiyle tekrardan siyasete girdi. .Sekiz ay ilkin özgür bırakıldı ve insanoğlu ondan "Moskova vekili" olarak söz ediyor.Khorzhan'a bakılırsa Sovyetler Birliği'nin dağılmasından bu yana özerk olan bölge, "sadece Rusya'nın yardımıyla" ayakta kaldı. Rus Komünist Partisi lideri, ölümünün koşulları hakkında acil bir soruşturma talep etti.Muhalefetin başı Khorzhan, bu senenin başlarında Moskova'ya gitti ve dönüşünde, önde gelen Putin yanlısı politikacıların kendisine "Rusya'dan cumhuriyetimize azami destek" sözü verdiğini iddia etti.Benzer bir durumda, Vadim Krasnoselsky, bu senenin başlarında Transdinyester yetkililerinin önlediğini iddia etmiş olduğu bir suikast girişiminin hedefiydi.Komplonun arkasında Ukrayna gizli saklı servisinin bulunduğunu iddia ettiler, sadece suçlama kısa süre sonrasında Ukrayna tarafınca reddedildi ve bunu "Kremlin tarafınca planlanmış bir provokasyon" olarak nitelendirdi.Rusya, Moldova tarafınca ayrılıkçı Transdinyester devletini ulusun istikrarını bozmak için kullanmakla suçlandı. Bazı uzmanlara bakılırsa Putin'in yeni bir imparatorluk kurma planları içinde daha ilkin Sovyetler Birliği'nin bir parçası olan Moldova'nın da işgal edilmesi yer ediniyor.Khorzhan'ın şüpheli cinayeti, popüler bir fitness uygulaması kullanılarak bulunan ve bir tetikçi tarafınca vurularak öldürülen bir Rus donanma kaptanının öldürülmesini takip ediyor.Ek olarak, kısa sürede Putin'in Ukrayna'ya karşı cenginde seferberlikten görevli yetkili olarak vazife meydana getiren Stanislav Rzhitsky, Krasnodar'daki Olympus Arena'nın yakınında koşarken dört el ateş edildi.Bir Makarov tabancasından çıkan yedi mermi sırtına ve göğsüne isabet ederek ona ateşlendi.Rzytskyi'nin ölümünün Ukrayna Ana İstihbarat Müdürlüğü tarafınca onaylanmasının arkasından misilleme spekülasyonları arttı.
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jaguarmen99 · 2 years
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ロシアの首都モスクワ中心部で7日、1917年の十月革命から105年を迎えるのを記念する集会が行われた。ロシア共産党のゲンナジー・ジュガーノフ(Gennady Zyuganov)委員長や極左の野党政治家セルゲイ・ウダリツォフ(Sergei Udaltsov)氏らの姿が見られた。(c)AFP
十月革命から105年、モスクワで集会 写真8枚 国際ニュース:AFPBB News
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kneedeepincynade · 1 year
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Friendship and unity are what make the excellent relationship between the KPRF and the CPC
The post is machine translated
Translation is at the bottom
The collective is on telegram
⚠️ IL PARTITO COMUNISTA CINESE SI CONGRATULA CON IL PARTITO COMUNISTA DELLA FEDERAZIONE RUSSA PER IL SUO 30° ANNIVERSARIO ⚠️
🚩 Il Comitato Centrale del Partito Comunista Cinese ha inviato un telegramma di congratulazioni indirizzato a Gennady Zyuganov, Presidente del Comitato Centrale del Partito Comunista della Federazione Russa, per il 30° Anniversario della Rifondazione del КПРФ:
✉️ "Al Comitato Centrale del Partito Comunista della Federazione Russa, ci congratuliamo con il Presidente Gennadij Andreevič Zjuganov e tutti i Compagni del КПРФ per il 30° Anniversario della rifondazione del Partito!" ⭐️
✉️ "Il КПРФ è una forza importante nella vita politica della Russia. Nel corso degli anni, il Partito Comunista Cinese e il Partito Comunista della Federazione Russa hanno mantenuto relazioni amichevoli e la cooperazione, svolgendo un ruolo considerevole nel rafforzare la Fiducia Reciproca Politica e Strategica nel promuovere lo sviluppo delle Relazioni Sino-Russe" ⭐️
✉️ "Attualmente, sotto la guida strategica di Xi Jinping - Segretario Generale del Comitato Centrale del Partito Comunista Cinese - e Vladimir Putin, le Relazioni Cina-Russia nell'ambito del Partenariato e dell'Interazione Strategica nella Nuova Era si stanno sviluppando con grande velocità" ⭐️
✉️ "Il Partito Comunista Cinese è pronto, con il КПРФ, a rafforzare ulteriormente gli scambi regolari tra i due Partiti, arricchire il contenuto della cooperazione e dare un maggior contributo allo sviluppo delle Relazioni Sino-Russe nella Nuova Era a beneficio dei Popoli dei due Paesi" ⭐️
✉️ "Auguriamo al Partito Comunista della Federazione Russa un grande successo nel realizzare il benessere e la prosperità del Paese" 💕
🔎 Per chi volesse approfondire il Tema del Rapporto tra CPC e KPRF, può rifarsi a questi post del Collettivo Shaoshan:
🔺Zjuganov: "La Cina continua l'Esperienza Sovietica, ha sollevato 800 milioni di persone dalla povertà, è una Potenza Spaziale e i Cinesi sono i primi al Mondo da trent'anni nel ritmo di sviluppo" 🚩
🔺Liu Jianchao, Responsabile del Dipartimento Internazionale del CC del Partito Comunista Cinese, ha annunciato una maggiore cooperazione con il Partito Comunista della Federazione Russa 🚩
🌸 Iscriviti 👉 @collettivoshaoshan
⚠️ THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CHINA CONGRATULATES THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION ON ITS 30TH ANNIVERSARY ⚠️
🚩 The Central Committee of the Communist Party of China sent a congratulatory telegram addressed to Gennady Zyuganov, Chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, on the 30th Anniversary of the Re-foundation of the КПРФ:
✉️ "To the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, we congratulate Chairman Gennady Andreevich Zyuganov and all Comrades of the КПРФ on the 30th Anniversary of the re-foundation of the Party!" ⭐️
✉️ "The КПРФ is an important force in the political life of Russia. Over the years, the Communist Party of China and the Communist Party of the Russian Federation have maintained friendly relations and cooperation, playing a considerable role in strengthening Political and Strategic Mutual Confidence in promoting the development of Sino-Russian relations" ⭐️
✉️ "Currently, under the strategic leadership of Xi Jinping - General Secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China - and Vladimir Putin, China-Russia Relations under Partnership and Strategic Interaction in the New Era are developing with great speed " ⭐️
✉️ "The Communist Party of China is ready, with the КПРФ, to further strengthen the regular exchanges between the two Parties, enrich the content of cooperation, and make greater contributions to the development of Sino-Russian Relations in the New Era for the benefit of the Peoples of the two Countries" ⭐️
✉️ "We wish the Communist Party of the Russian Federation great success in realizing the country's well-being and prosperity" 💕
🔎 For those wishing to learn more about the relationship between CPC and KPRF, refer to these posts from the Shaoshan Collective:
🔺Zjuganov: "China continues the Soviet experience, it has lifted 800 million people out of poverty, it is a Space Power and the Chinese are the first in the world for thirty years in the pace of development" 🚩
🔺Liu Jianchao, Head of the International Department of the CC of the Communist Party of China, announced greater cooperation with the Communist Party of the Russian Federation 🚩
🌸 Subscribe 👉 @collettivoshaoshan
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kristinzervos · 2 years
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nedsecondline · 2 years
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Russian Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov: ‘The special military operation in Ukraine has escalated into a full-scale war’ — Meduza
Russian Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov: ‘The special military operation in Ukraine has escalated into a full-scale war’ — Meduza
Source: Russian Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov: ‘The special military operation in Ukraine has escalated into a full-scale war’ — Meduza
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bills-bible-basics · 5 years
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Revealer of Secrets and Sergei Stepashin is on Bill's Bible Basics Blog at https://www.billkochman.com/Blog/revealer-of-secrets-and-sergei-stepashin/
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spoilersgr · 4 years
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Zyuganov: Χαιρετήστε τους Σοβιετικούς ήρωες που συνέθλιψαν τη χιτλερική Γερμανία – Υπερασπιστείτε την ιστορική αλήθεια
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