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#irina rostov
yuppie-devil · 2 years
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The Yuppie Handbook (Part 6) Tiki-Taka Database
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puppy--jam · 7 months
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Favourite game: 016
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by Baroque Decay
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cmjncyan · 2 years
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Sintracorp's heartthrob ♡
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yuppieresearch · 1 year
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YUPPIE PSYCHO: A COMPLETE TIMELINE
since i received the collector’s edition, i thought it would be a good time to type out the yuppie timeline! this is ordered from past to present, and does not include much elaboration on events or in-game evidence. if you are confused about a certain event or want to know where i found a certain date, please ask! i am always happy to share.
1918 — João Sintra (father of Domori and Rei) is born.
1924 — Xiu Ying (mother of Domori and Rei) is born.
1924-1951 (implied to be sometime in the 1950’s) — Domori is “adopted” by the Sintra family.
1951 — Sintracorp is founded by João Sintra.
1958 (March 21st-April 19th, an Aries) — Irina Rostov is born.
1960 (April 20th-May 20th, a Taurus) — Hugo is born.
1961 (October 23rd-November 21st, a Scorpio) — Rei Sintra is born to João and Xiu through Domori’s blessing.
1962 (November 22nd-December 21st, a Sagittarius) — Jenna Malone is born.
1963 (January 20th-February 18th, an Aquarius) — James Spader is born.
1965 (June 22nd-July 22nd, a Cancer) — Eric Marshall is born.
1966 (August 23rd-September 22nd, a Virgo)— Inay Doshi is born.
1968 (May 21st-June 21st, a Gemini) — Mappy is born.
1968, December — The Cornucopia Project begins.
1969 (February 19th-March 20th, a Pisces) — Marta Sosa is born.
1971, May 2nd — The last photo of the Sintra family is taken. Domori and Rei switch bodies.
1971 — Domori, in the body of Rei Sintra, goes missing and Rei is presumed dead.
1971 (implied to be June) — Rei Sintra, in the body of Domori, is burned at the stake.
1972, April 2nd — João Sintra commits suicide.
1973, May 10th — Xiu Ying takes over Sintracorp after the death of her husband.
1973 (July 23rd-August 22nd, a Leo) — Anthony Chapman Jr. is born.
1973 (December 22nd-January 19th, a Capricorn) — Catherine Hicks is born.
1974 (September 22nd-October 23rd, a Libra) — Brian Pasternack is born.
1981 — Xiu Ying establishes a protocol that grants Rei immediate succession to the CEO position.
1981 — Xiu Ying begins to hire witch hunters; Hugo is hired as a janitor as well.
1982 or 1983 (the gravestone and Sintra say different dates) — Xiu Ying dies.
1983, December — The sixth floor in the Sintracorp building is closed. Presumably, every Sintra android remaining is destroyed. (spader possibly began his contracted work with sintracorp around this time.)
1984, April 4th — The old Sintranet becomes corrupted. Employees are given updated computers. (possibly due to the devil’s influence?)
1982-1989 — The witch hunters A.M., R.C., and E.N. converse via handwritten letters.
1989, November — R. Corvo is killed, and this is heavily implied to be done by Hugo.
1989 — A. Moeta and E. Nazari are killed shortly afterwards.
1995, possibly— TIKITAKA becomes chief of security. (in one of his notes, tikitaka says he has been connected to the system for 58 weeks. this is a year and six weeks. the note is undated, so i merely used brian’s starting year as the base point.)
1996, either December 2nd or February 12th — Sintracorp sends a letter to Brian Pasternack, saying he has secured a position in their ranks.
1996, a week later (either December 9th or February 19th) — Anthony Chapman Jr., Catherine Hicks, and Brian Pasternack arrive at Sintracorp.
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mariacallous · 1 year
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In February 2023, Irina, an inmate at the IK-28 women’s penal colony in Russia’s Samara region, began speaking out publicly about her inability to get the HIV treatment she needs in prison. Hers is not an isolated case — HIV-positive inmates throughout the country have been going without lifesaving medication for years. Meduza spoke with human rights activists about how this situation came to be, and with prisoners who are being denied access to the treatment they need to survive.
At least seven regions
On February 22, the independent outlet Holod published the story of Irina, an inmate with HIV who’s being held in the IK-28 penal colony in Russia’s Samara region. Communicating through her son, she told journalists that the HIV-positive prisoners there hadn’t received the antiretroviral therapy drugs Kaletra (lopinavir/ritonavir), Simanod (atazanavir), Ritonavir, or Kemeruvir (darunavir) for several weeks. According to Irina, 10% of the prison’s detainees are now confirmed to be HIV-positive.
Irina said that when she and other women with HIV wrote to the prison superintendent, their complaint wasn’t registered. Yevgeny, Irina’s son, said that a report was filed against her, and that the administration wanted to send her to a “ShIZO,” or “punishment cell,” but in the end, they only gave her a verbal reprimand. On March 6, Yevgeny told Meduza that his mother had been hospitalized with severe liver pain. According to him, she still hasn’t received the HIV treatment she needs.
Since the beginning of 2023, there have been at least seven reports of Russian prisons lacking antiretroviral medications that patients need, according to data collected by the patient advocacy group Patient Control for its project Pereboi.ru. Activists have reported complaints from patients in the Leningrad, Volgograd, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Rostov, Samara, and Sverdlovsk regions.
According to Georgy Ivanov, a lawyer for the Committee Against Torture, it’s almost impossible to describe in detail the scale of what’s happening: “Neither I nor organizations that specialize in helping prisoners have complete statistics on these kinds of appeals. The last time a lack of medication was discussed [in the media], as far as I remember, was in 2019. Back then, the problem arose because there weren’t contracts for supplying the drugs.” 
In a comment to the Russian newspaper Izvestia, Patient Control representatives expressed fears that there could be more prisons where HIV-positive inmates lack stable access to medications than there are registered complaints. According to activist Yulia Vereshchagina, prisoners likely keep silent because they are afraid of prison administrators.
No appointments, wrong medications
Before becoming a human rights activist, Committee Against Torture lawyer Pyotr Khromov served time in Moscow’s Krasnaya Presnya pre-trial detention center. As part of his assigned work as a hospital attendant, he compiled lists of people with HIV. Pyotr described prisoners’ initial medical examinations to Meduza: “When they admit people to the pre-trial detention center, they administer blood tests for syphilis and HIV. About half of HIV-positive detainees learn about their status for first time through this test. Obviously, they weren’t under observation at the AIDS center before this and weren’t given any HIV therapy.” After that, according to Khromov, the center takes another blood sample to check these detainees’ immune status and determine how well their immune systems are coping with the virus.
Pyotr Khromov said that Moscow detention centers only nominally have in-house infectious disease doctors — in reality, the inmates diagnosed with HIV can only receive an appointment for drug therapy at the Matrosskaya Tishina detention center hospital.
If a person is diagnosed with HIV and can’t provide a document showing that they previously received antiretroviral (ARV) therapy, he won’t receive it for several months — not until he goes to the only hospital in all of Moscow’s detention facilities, in Matrosskaya Tishina, where he’ll be seen by an infectious disease doctor. [This happens] even if his immune status is low: I’ve personally seen an index of 20 cells/mm3 in a person waiting to see a doctor.
Due to these limitations, even when drugs are available, interruptions in ARV therapy can occur when an HIV-positive person is held at the detention center if there’s no infectious disease doctor on site to prescribe treatment.
Patients who are already registered with regional AIDS centers receive medications immediately upon arrival to detention centers or penal colonies, but the drug treatment they get in prison isn’t always the same as what their doctors prescribed. Sergey, who was serving his sentence in the IK-9 penal colony in the Kaliningrad region, experienced this issue firsthand. He found out about his diagnosis 20 years ago and had been taking the same set of drugs to treat his HIV infection since 2015. But when he was in prison, he told Meduza, he wasn’t allowed to continue his usual regimen:
I came to the medical unit to get the medication, and they told me that my medication wasn’t available. That I could take a different one, if I wanted. They hadn’t done any tests. No one checked if a different regimen would work for me or not. From January to March 2022, they gave me six different regimens. They didn’t really explain why there weren’t any [of my usual] drugs. They said that the Federal Penitentiary Service had no supplies, and that was it.
When Sergey was released and came to the regional AIDS center for a checkup, the medical staff there explained to him that the drugs he’d been given in prison shouldn’t be taken together. The prison’s administration didn’t provide information to the AIDS center about what exactly Sergey had taken for the full duration of his imprisonment.
Theoretically, if a prison doesn’t have the necessary medication for a patient’s treatment regimen, the patient’s relatives can provide it to the colony. Irina’s son told Meduza that he has to search for drugs for his mother on his own: “It’s very difficult to find ARV drugs in pharmacies in the Samara region, but I managed. They’re very expensive — it costs at least 10 thousand rubles ($132.70 dollars) a month. Not everyone has that kind of money. Or relatives who can buy and pass on the medication.”
In order to receive drug treatment, an inmate must report their HIV status to prison administrators. This requires obtaining a statement from the medical unit. Human rights activist Maria told Meduza that prison medical staff rarely sign such permits: “[Let’s say] a person is being treated with a three-drug regimen, and one of them is not available in the penal colony. If the Federal Penitentiary Service signs off on prescribing this drug to the inmate, the colony would get itself in trouble. After all, it’s the colony’s fault that the prisoner is forced to buy a drug that he’s legally entitled to receive for free.”
Drug procurement chaos
One of the reasons prisons aren’t always able to receive the medication they need has to do with Russia’s state procurement process, according to the Committee Against Torture’s Pyotr Khromov: “No matter what kind of antiretroviral therapy a person uses on the outside, in penal colonies or detention centers he’ll receive only one type of medical therapy — the one purchased by the Federal Penitentiary Service’s regional medical department. Mainly Kaletra, as it’s the most widespread and the cheapest. But unlike people on the outside, who can be given a different drug if they experience side effects, prisoners aren’t given a choice.”
Russia’s system for procuring medications for inmates with HIV has been inconsistent in recent years. On March 1, 2019, the Health Ministry transferred all purchasing authority for medications for HIV and for hepatitis B and C to the Federal Penitentiary Service. The Health Ministry only retained the right to purchase antiviral drugs and diagnostic tools for federal government agencies subordinated to the ministry, the Federal Medical-Biological Agency, and Russia’s consumer welfare agency Rospotrebnadzor, as well as for medical institutions in Russia’s federal subjects.
At the same time, the Finance Ministry was instructed to reallocate the budget set aside for ARV drug procurement for the Federal Penitentiary Service. A 2019 report from Russia’s consumer welfare agency indicated that during the course of the year, about 90% of HIV-infected patients in prisons were receiving antiretroviral therapy. However, according to the NGO Treatment Preparedness Coalition, only half as many inmates actually received treatment. Starting in 2021, responsibility for purchasing ARV drugs for prisoners was transferred back to the Health Ministry.
This change of agencies responsible for procurement caused problems with purchasing ARV drugs and delivering them to prisoners with HIV, human rights activist Andrey told Meduza. A coordinator for the human rights group Russia Behind Bars (whose name we’ve omitted for security reasons) concurred: even if state procurements are made in full and prisoners have access to the drugs, not everyone can receive ARV therapy, as there are no unified regulations for issuing these drugs.
Some people with HIV who are serving sentences in Russian prisons aren’t Russian citizens. They receive medical therapy in the penal colonies because such treatment falls under the Federal Penitentiary Service’s authority. Upon release, these people end up in temporary detention centers for foreign nationals — the Internal Affairs Ministry’s jurisdiction. There, they don’t receive any treatment, as this doesn’t fall under the agency’s authority. 
Incorrect and life-threatening ‘treatment’
In 2013, Yulia was sent to the IK-4 penal colony in Kaliningrad Oblast. She knew that she was HIV-positive before her imprisonment and had been taking the medications Kivexa (abacavir/lamivudine) and Isentress (raltegravir). Yulia told Meduza that from the start of her incarceration in a pre-trial detention center, she was unable to get the medications she needs:
On my first day [in prison], the so-called “feeding window” (Editor’s note: the window where medications are dispensed) opened, and they threw some pills at me. I said it didn’t look like my medication. They just told me: “Take what you’re given.”
According to Yulia, infectious disease doctors often put down a “less severe” stage of HIV in their notes when examining new inmates. This, she said, is a way for prisons to “maintain a stable number of relatively healthy people and not give inmates grounds to register their disabilities.”
In 2016, Yulia noticed that she was being given expired medications. Then, instead of daily therapy, she started receiving packages of pills for several days. The medical unit told Yulia that this was “normal,” and that the medications they were giving her can be taken up to six months after the expiration date. After that incident, according to Yulia, she started receiving pills either without packaging or without date labels. “I asked the medical unit why they cut off the expiration date if they were sure that the medication was okay. I was told that it was none of my business,” she said.
Yulia said that during her imprisonment, her medication was regularly changed without any tests; prison employees would simply show her a new entry in her medical records and explain that “now the medication will be different.” Once, when Yulia was prescribed the medication Kaletra, she had to write a refusal, as she’d previously been hospitalized with liver complications after taking it. During her imprisonment, Yulia took eight different drug combinations — a harmful practice that can cause an infection to progress.
In 2019, Yulia got pregnant. While undergoing exams and standard blood tests at the colony, she learned that her viral load was extremely high:
I went to the head of the medical unit and said that if they didn’t give a shit about me, at least take care of my child’s health: “Take me to an outside hospital.” The doctor nodded his head and disappeared — he just left and went on vacation for a few weeks.
Yulia was finally able to register at a maternity clinic during her 21st week of pregnancy. “When they brought me to the regular hospital, the gynecologist was shocked, of course, at the number and types of drugs I was taking as a pregnant woman. I had a prison guard with me — the doctor asked him what drugs were available now so that a permanent therapy regimen could be prescribed. He chuckled and said [the prison] had everything,” she recalled.
That evening, Yulia went to the prison’s medical unit to get the pills and saw the same medications she had been taking before. When asked why the promised medication was still unavailable to her, she was told that the administration “hadn’t ordered it yet.” She didn’t receive her new medications until a month after the appointment.
As soon as Yulia found out she was pregnant, she decided she would give birth without medications. According to her, the infectious disease doctor authorized her to do so, noting that her viral load had decreased. For unknown reasons, however, the doctor didn’t indicate the authorization in Yulia’s medical records, and she ultimately had a cesarean section against her will. The baby had high antibodies, she told Meduza, which suggested she was at risk for developing the disease herself. “My child was checked by doctors until she was three years old — she was only recently cleared. All this time, there was still a risk that my daughter would also be infected with HIV,” Yulia said.
Due to her frequent drug changes, Yulia developed drug resistance — there’s no longer any medication that tests show works on her body and reduces her viral load. As a result, her HIV infection has progressed to stage four, which is close to the terminal stage.
Human rights activist Maria said that because of the frequent changes in medical therapy, prisoners with HIV suffer from kidney failure, diarrhea, dizziness, weakness, anemia, and nausea. Yulia’s case, she told Meduza, is one of the worst possible outcomes of the government’s negligence.
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cyberbenb · 9 months
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Hacking Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin, Russian war criminal, head of Combat Training of A-50 early warning aircraft, military unit 41520
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Ukrainian hacktivists of the Cyber Resistance team, together with InformNapalm international intelligence community volunteers, continue to collect information about officers of the 610th Center for Combat Training and Retraining of Military Pilots (military unit 41520), Ivanovo city, Severny airfield. The A-50U airborne early warning and control (AEW&C) aircraft are based at this airfield. This Russian equivalent of AWACS is used by the Russian Federation to direct missile attacks on Ukraine.
This time, the target of the study is the commander of the Combat Training Section (preparation of combat control crews), Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Kasatkin.
LIEUTENANT COLONEL KASATKIN
The retrieved information allows us to validate the personal data of this officer and transfer it to the relevant competent authorities involved in identifying war criminals for the future tribunal.
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Kasatkin Vladimir Vyacheslavovich (Rus.: Касаткин Владимир Вячеславович), born on 8/21/1977. Passport: 45 97 115347. Personal number: У-968986. Registered at: Ivanovo, post office 14th, house # 313. However, another address also appears in the mail: Ivanovo, Voykova st., 13, apt. 57.
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He has a wife, Irina (entered in the phone book as “Irishka”), born in 1971 (passport) and son Maxim, born in 2004 (passport).
We are also publishing his phone book, since its data has already been processed. The list of contacts includes Kasatkin’s colleagues, for example, Colonel Leonid Rusin who featured in one of our previous CYBINT investigations. And for our active readership interested in doing their own bit of OSINT we suggest going through the phone book (*PDF) to find the contacts of the operational duty command posts of the Savasleyka air base, as well as air bases in Krymsk, Lipetsk, and Rostov. These airfields are used by MiG-31K fighters carrying the Kinzhal missiles to hit Ukraine. We will be thankful to all those who will be able to get through or overload the lines of the duty posts. Please make sure to write back to us.

Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin managed to get in a spotlight in Syria, where he received a positive character reference and a nomination for an award (electronic copy of the reference document *PDF).
However, in the same month, also in Syria, our defendant was detained by the military police. Intoxicated, Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin managed to invite another lieutenant colonel “to go f… himself” because the latter “hated aviation and despised pilots”. Kasatkin’s explanatory report to the commander of the Russian military transport aviation forces Lieutenant General Benediktov (*PDF) is a shining example of the lofty writing style practiced by the so-called “Russian officers”. 
Also, the mail dump contained an interesting order to develop measures to prevent offenses among military personnel in the temporarily occupied Donetsk in cooperation with the so-called “Traffic Police of the DPR” (*PDF). Kasatkin’s connection with the occupied Donbas is not yet fully clear from his correspondence. However, this message once again demonstrates that it was Russia that waged a hybrid war in the east of Ukraine from 2014 to 2022, whereas Russian officers of different levels and units were very closely woven into the management of the military and terrorist formations in the occupied parts of the Donbas.
TRAINING AND EDUCATION OF SPECIALISTS ON A-50 and IL-22 AIRPLANES
However, the greatest value of our investigation target is not in his drunken antics in Syria. Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin and his father, Honored Military Specialist of the Russian Federation, Colonel of the Reserve Vyacheslav Kasatkin (Rus.: Касаткин Вячеслав Анатольевич), are involved in the process of reforming Russian radar surveillance and targeting aviation systems.
We are making public the retrieved documents on proposals for staff changes and reassignment of the 610th Center, information on the commissioning preparations of the A-100 systems, which should replace the aging A-50 aircraft developed back in the Soviet times.
The data also contains information on various communication, monitoring and recording systems used on A-50 aircraft, as well as about the simulators used to train the specialists for A-50 and Il-22 airplanes.
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Experts may be interested in the Russian Combat Training Courses, the information on the number of rating flight hours required to qualify for different categories.
We were especially interested in manuals on interfacing of the Russian systems for performing target acquisition and tracking tasks:
Tracking controller operations (for Ivanovo) (PDF)
Targeting controller operations (in Ivanovo) (PDF)
The retrieved data helped us improve our understanding of the problems that the Russians faced while operating A-50 aircraft. For example, Kasatkin filed a report based on the results of a snap check of the air defense troops of the Central Military District of the Russian Federation. A detailed operational report – from the moment the order was received to the moment the A-50 aircraft took off – gives an idea of the enemy’s response speed.
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We also learned about issues with the training of the flight crews and fuel provisioning for the aircraft of the Center (screenshot).
P.S.
So far, we cannot make public all the information. However, we can offer some careful hints and clues to those sitting up and taking notice.
Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin also kept in his e-mail a number of messages compromising a whole group of Russian officers. Experts will most probably guess with whom and about what Kasatkin corresponded, and why the Machulishchi airfield appears on the last screen shot. Unfortunately, Comrade Lieutenant Colonel did not get in touch again.
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Read more publications based on the data from Cyber Resistance hacktivists
Hacking a Russian war criminal, deputy commander of the OMON of the Krasnoyarsk Krai
Hacking a Russian war criminal, commander of 960th Assault Aviation Regiment
Hacking Russian Z-volunteer Mikhail Luchin who ordered sex toys for $25,000 instead of drones for the Russian army.
BagdasarovLeaks: hacking ex-member of the Russian State Duma Semyon Bagdasarov. Iranian gambit
Hacked: Russian GRU officer wanted by the FBI, leader of the hacker group APT 28
Hacking “James Bond”: medical service commander of 960th Assault Aviation Regiment doxed key personnel of his own unit
Hacking Andrey Lugovoy, member of the Russian State Duma, First Deputy Head of the Security Committee
Ukrainian hacktivists acquired first-ever photo of the GRU hacker unit commander wanted by the FBI for meddling in the U.S. election
New evidence of collaboration of former Slovak Justice Minister Štefan Harabin with the Russian Federation
Hacking Colonel Leonid Rusin, ex-commander of Russian AWACS unit
Ukrainian hackers posted lists and documents of the Russian 72nd Motorized Rifle Brigade (TOP-10 files)
Economic summit Russia–Africa 2023 databases hacked by Ukrainian hacktivists
Distribution and reprint with reference to the source is welcome! (Creative Commons – Attribution 4.0 International – CC BY 4.0) InformNapalm social media pages:  Facebook / Тwitter / Telegram / Slate (Sl8).
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The post Hacking Lieutenant Colonel Kasatkin, Russian war criminal, head of Combat Training of A-50 early warning aircraft, military unit 41520 appeared first on InformNapalm.org (English).
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kazachokolate · 4 years
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dolokhoded · 2 years
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Fedya and/or Sonya for the character ask :)
blorbos >:)))
fedya
do i like them: no. obviously. /s
5 good qualities: he doesn't have any <3 he sucks <3 uhhh but uh he prob does, hold on. 1) really loves his mom !!!! that's good !! 2) he's uh. self aware at least? 3) i feel like he,,,,,has a pretty strong sense of justice. 4) he uhhh used anatole for his personal gain. king shit. 5) he's hot.
3 bad qualities: just 3? ok. 1) he's prob incapable of human emotion and empathy 2) he's petty and vengeful to no end 3) he always wants to start shit for LITERALLY no reason like,, my guy,,,
favorite moment: that moment after he argued with anatole before the elopement where they were in different rooms and they were yelling at each other through the walls like "COME EAT SOMETHING" "I DON'T FUCKING WANNA >:(". it was so funny. also nikolai's visit to him while he was recovering minus the misogynistic monologue.
otp: .......... you know.
brotp: him and denisov, or him and denisov and nikolai. they're not talked about enough.
ot3: i don't think i have one actually?
notp: dolokhov/petya. no no. that is a child. i do think petya had like a silly little crush on him but he'd never reciprocate he's a MURDERED not a pedo ok
best quote: his "here's to the health of married women", " to the health of handsome women ", and all its variations quote is pretty iconic.
headcanon: which one have i not talked about hmmmm. his sister's name is irina. i don't think i've mentioned that before. also he actually really appreciates some good music. it soothes him. and he's often, y'know very unsoothed.
sonya
do i like them: sonya is babygirl i love her
5 good qualities: girl. does sonya do anything bad ever? she's loyal, she supports her family, she's incredibly sweet and kind and just,, good. she's genuinely a good person and it's rlly weird because tolstoy wrote her.
3 bad qualities: she doesn't give herself anything. ever, she refuses to do anything for herself. also she wanted to marry her cousin. who she was raised as siblings with. so uh. incest i guess. and i feel like she can't rlly,, sort out her priorities which is why she ended up where she did.
favorite moment: that part where she was dressed as a man and she was just so energetic and so fun and just chaos mode sonya.
otp: i don't have any ships with sonya i hc her as aro
brotp: prob natasha but also i've been thinking about her relationship with vera and how they could potentially fix it and be nicer to each other (i've just been thinking about vera and why she is the way she is a lot lately). so that's been on my mind. but also her and dolokhov being besties is my wack hc.
ot3: see otp.
notp: her and nikolai. obviously.
best quote: i don't have a favorite book quote but in great comet all of her parts in the opera hit so hard for some reason.
headcanon: sonya never learned any music because the rostovs just didn't care about her that much (</3) until vera agreed to teach her some basic piano (very reluctantly). eventually she learned more on her own and she was pretty good. wow many music hcs today that wasn't intentional.
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isgull-moved · 2 years
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so.nya ros.tova’s canon divergent ending,  because sir tol.stoy can suck it
when sonya moves away to stay with her mother’s side of the family in the countryside, she doesn’t really maintain correspondence with the rostovs for some time. she’ll always be thankful that they took her in and raised her in a generally good life, but she does come to terms with how trivial she was made to feel in that household and finally admits to herself that it wasn’t right. a long time passes before she does see them again, when she has a family of her own and feels that her children have the right to meet their other relatives.
baron yaroslav “slava” olegovich krayevsky is sonya’s eventual husband, an officer early on in the war who is the heir to his family’s ancestral estate in rural voronezh. slava was one of the first people outside of her maternal relatives that she meets after her move and is considered a long-time family friend. they grew fond of one another easily, but sonya was too reluctant to openly acknowledge the fact that she might have found someone to love and someone who would love her the way she deserved to be. slava waits for sonya for almost two years, placing his proposal on hold until she appeared to be ready for it.
through their marriage, she earns the title of ‘baroness.’ sonya and slava have five children together: twin boys, alexei yaroslavich and yaroslav yaroslavich, followed by their three girls, irina yaroslavovna, valeria yaroslavovna, and yulia yaroslavovna. each of their children’s births are two years apart.
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jakegardiner · 3 years
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I haven't read war and peace so take this with a grain of salt BUT I think helene being a villain is more vital to natasha's characterization than pierre's - I really love the way Natasha is written because she IS a typical ingenue type, but everything she does makes sense for her and she's so much more fleshed out than someone like Cosette or Johanna, without losing any of the "traits" that they share. The audience watches her get manipulated by Anatole & Helene, and if Helene hadn't set the example of being with Dolokhov publicly, Natasha would never have been willing to even entertain the idea of talking to Anatole; it's only when he kisses her that she begins to rationalize that her breaking faith with Andre means she MUST love Anatole, and they MUST be together - if not, her guilt would destroy her completely (as it does at the end of the show). If Helene hadn't manipulated her in The Opera & Charming, the audience probably wouldn't be willing to understand her motivations and this would make her much more unlikeable.
So first of all hello I love you. And you are absolutely right— in the context of the musical! Adding the duel for context and making the affair legit definitely allowed for Natasha (and Pierre) to be more sympathetic and likeable characters, which is needed much more in a modern musical than a philosophical tirade or whatever Tolstoy called it. I’ve actually lost track of the number of times I’ve scribbled “Natasha you dumb bitch” in the margins of my copy just she’s just like that in the book. But somewhere on this site (i think it’s buried under thousands of ducks in my likes) someone wrote a beautiful beautiful post on why the Rostovs and Kuragins (and the Bolkonskys and Pierre) are the way they are because of the way their parents showed them love and it’s just *chefs kiss*. I think it was either andryushas or officialleotolstoy I will try to find it to link here. But that’s basically where all of Natasha’s motivations come from— she expects to be loved. And with Andrei away and only her father and Sonya in Moscow with her, it makes sense that she accepts Anatole’s love. It’s just like. She’s completely naïve to even the upper class society she was born into because of her parents’ approach to raising her.
But enough about Natasha I am here for my girl Helene because Tolstoy and Dave (and Carpi) did her dirty. Musical Helene is characterized as a villain because the show was already so long without devolving into her motivations.
I really feel for Helene because she’s just chilling with some guy when her father bursts out and congratulates the two of them on their engagement, like what? Not to mention everything Helene had heard about Pierre was about how he was a bastard, he was unable to conduct himself in society, but suddenly he becomes the most eligible bachelor in Russia? Press x to doubt. 
And Pierre’s always off being depressed or doing cult stuff with the Masons, and I think it’s fair to say someone who grew up closely with her brother would need more close companionship then you could get from chatting with guests at parties. And Boris might have brought companionship and interesting conversations to the table, but it’s fairly obvious his only intent is to climb the social ladder. Dolokhov also wants some of the social capital that comes with being well acquainted with the queen of society, though it’s plain to see he only wants enough to ensure his mother and sister will be taken care of should something happen to him. And Dolokhov is a friend of Anatole’s, and Pierre clearly finds him a decent enough man to open his home to him. I certainly understand Dave’s purpose in making the affair legitimate, but it simply being a figment of Pierre’s imagination adds another layer to his character I think.
Anyways this is a hot mess but I love Helene and stan this catholic icon. /j
Also here is a link to zip file of War and Peace (1965-1967) with subtitles because Irina Skobtseva did an AMAZING performance as Helene
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goalhofer · 3 years
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2020 Olympics R.O.C. Roster
Archery
Galsan Bazarzhzapov (Moscow)
Elena Osipova (Moscow)
Svetlana Gomboeva (Moscow)
Ksenia Perova (Lesnoy)
Athletics
Sergey Shubenkov (Barnaul)
Vasiliy Mizinov (Magnitogorsk)
Mikhail Akimenko (Prokhladny)
Ilya Ivanyuk (Krasny)
Valeriy Pronkin (Nizhny Novgorod)
Ilya Shkurenyov (Linyovo)
Elvira Khasanova (Ufa)
Darya Klishina (Tver)
Mariya Lasitskene (Prokhladny)
Anzhelika Sidorova (Moscow)
Badminton
Sergey Sirant (Vladivostok)
Vladimir Ivanov (Kusa)
Ivan Sozonov (Yekaterinburg)
Evgeniya Kosetskaya (Kazan)
Boxing
Gabil Mamedov (Orenburg)
Imam Khataev (Grozny)
Ivan Veriasov (St. Petersburg)
Albert Batyrgaziev (Babayurt)
Andrey Zamkovoy (Svobodny)
Gleb Bakshi (Simferopol)
Muslim Gadzhimagomedov (Nitilsukh)
Svetlana Solouianova (Dmitrovgrad)
Liudmila Vorontsova (Petropavlovka)
Saadat Dalgatova (Khunzakhsky)
Zemfira Magomedalieva (Tlyarata)
Cycling
Pavel Sivakov (Soueich, France)
Aleksandr Vlasov (Vyborg)
Ilnur Zakarin (Naberezhnye Chelny)
Tamara Dronova (Moscow)
Diving
Evgeny Kuznetsov (Stavropol)
Nikita Shleikher (Stavropol)
Oleksandr Bondar (Moscow)
Viktor Minibaev (Moscow)
Maria Poliakova (Moscow)
Anna Konanykhina (St. Petersburg)
Yulia Timoshinina (Moscow)
Equestrian
Aleksandr Markov (Ryazan)
Andrey Mitin (Moscow)
Maria Shuvalovna (Moscow)
Aleksandra Maksakova (The Hague, The Netherlands)
Tatyana Kosterina (Nizhny Novgorod)
Inessa Merkulova (Rostov-Na-Donu)
Fencing
Nikita Glazkov (Moscow)
Anton Borodachev (Moscow)
Kirill Borodachev (Moscow)
Vladislav Mylnikov (Moscow)
Konstantin Lokhanov (Moscow)
Dmitriy Danilenko (Moscow)
Sergey Bida (Moscow)
Sergey Khodos (Oskemen, Kazakhstan)
Pavel Sukhov (Samara)
Timur Safin (Tashkent, Uzbekistan)
Kamil Ibragimov (Moscow)
Veniamin Reshetnikov (Novosibirsk)
Yulia Lichagina (Kazan)
Aizanat Murtazaeva (Moscow)
Marta Martyanova (Kazan)
Violetta Vlasov (Dzerzhinsk)
Violetta Khrapina (Moscow)
Inna Deriglazova (Kurchatov)
Larisa Korobeynikova (Kurgan)
Adelina Zagidullina (Ufa)
Olga Nikitina (Moscow)
Sofia Pozdniakova (Novosibirsk)
Sofya Mishin (Moscow)
Svetlana Sheveleva (Moscow)
Gymnastics
David Belyavskiy (Yekaterinburg)
Artur Dalaloyan (Moscow)
Aleksandr Kartsev (Vladimir)
Nikita Nagornyy (Rostov-Na-Dan)
Dmitry Ushakov (Krasnodar)
Andrey Yudin (Tolyatti)
Susana Kochesok (Tliustenkhabl)
Yana Lebedeva (Moscow)
Viktoria Listunova (Moscow)
Angelina Melnikova (Voronezh)
Vladi Urazova (Rostov-Na-Dan)
Elena Gerasimova (Cheboksary)
Ari Averina (Zavolzhye)
Dina Averina (Zavolzhye)
Anastasia Bliznyuk (Penza)
Anastasia Maksimova (Nizhny Novgorod)
Angelina Shkatova (Khimki, Ukraine)
Anastasia Tatareva (Moscow)
Alisa Tishchenko (Krasnodar)
Handball
Natalia Reshetnikova (Yekaterinburg)
Ekaterina Zelenkova (Yaroslavl)
Veronika Nikitina (Tolyatti)
Anna Sedoykina (Volgograd)
Polina Kuznetsova (Astrakhanochka)
Anna Sen (Krasnodar)
Anastasia Lagina (Yaroslavl)
Anna Vyakhireva (Volgograd)
Marina Sudakova (Volgograd)
Galina Gabisova (Rostov-Na-Dan)
Vladlena Bobrovnikova (Krasnodar)
Daria Samokhina (Tolyatti)
Kseniya Makeyeva (Ufa)
Olga Fomina (Samara)
Yana Zhilinskayte (Uray)
Ekaterina Ilina (Tolyatti)
Elizaveta Malashenko (Tolyatti)
Yulia Managorova (Rostov-Na-Don)
Diana Golub (Krasnodar)
Antonina Skorobogatchenko (Volgograd)
Mariia Dudina (St. Petersburg)
Anastasiia Illarionova (Istra)
Olga Sherbak (Sevastopol, Ukraine)
Victoriya Kalinina (Maykop)
Polina Kaplina (Irkutsk)
Polina Gorshkova (Tolyatti)
Valeriia Kirdiasheva (Buzuluk)
Milana Tazhenova (Astrakhan)
Judo
Robert Mshvidobadze (Gori, Georgia)
Yakub Shamilov (Argun)
Musa Mogushkov (Nazran)
Alan Khubetsov (Vladikavkaz)
Mikhail Igolnikov (Tuapse)
Niyaz Ilyasov (Bataysk)
Tamerlan Bashaev (Kazan)
Irina Dolgova (Bratsk)
Natalia Kuziutina (Bryansk)
Daria Mezhetskaia (Perm)
Daria Davydova (Naberezhnye Chelny)
Madina Taimazova (Kazan)
Aleksandra Babintseva (Kirov)
Karate
Anna Chernysheva (Moscow)
Pentathlon
Alexander Lifanov (Simferopol)
Adelina Ibatullina (Ufa)
Gulnaz Gubaydullina (Novy Urengoy)
Rugby
Anna Baranchuk (Moscow)
Anna Gavrilyuk (Moscow)
Anna Minislamova (Moscow)
Arina Bystrova (Uzhhorod, Ukraine)
Bayzat Khamidova (Moscow)
Darya Bobkova (Nizhny Novgorod)
Darya Lushina (Moscow)
Darya Noritsina (Moscow)
Ekaterina Bankerova (St. Petersburg)
Ekaterina Kazakova (Moscow)
Elena Zdrokovna (Moscow)
Kristina Seredina (Altai Krai)
Lyudmila Artamonova (St. Petersburg)
Marina Kukina (Moscow)
Marina Petrova (Moscow)
Maria Perestyak (Krasnoyarsk)
Maria Shemchuk (Moscow)
Nadezhna Kudinova (Belovo)
Nikolina Ryashina (Moscow)
Yulia Guzeva (Moscow)
Yulia Ledovskaya (Moscow)
Alena Tiron (Novosibirisk)
Climbing
Alexey Rubtsov (Moscow)
Yulia Kaplina (Tyumen)
Viktoria Meshkova (Yekaterinburg)
Swimming
Aleksandr Kudashev (Samara)
Kirill Martynychev (St. Petersburg)
Max Stupin (Moscow)
Aleksandr Yegorov (Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan)
Alexander Shchegolev (Moscow)
Ilya Borodin (Bryansk)
Anton Chupkov (Moscow)
Ilya Druzhinin (Volgograd)
Ivan Girev (Gavrilov-Yam)
Kliment Kolesnikov (Moscow)
Martin Malyutin (Omsk)
Andrey Minakov (St. Petersburg)
Vladimir Morozov (Novosibirsk)
Kirill Prigoda (St. Petersburg)
Evgeny Rylov (Novotroitsk)
Grigory Tarasevich (Omsk)
Mikhail Vekovischev (Obninsk)
Andrey Zhilkin (Moscow)
Vladislav Grinev (Moscow)
Aleksandr Krasnykh (Bugulma)
Kirill Abrosimov (Moscow)
Evgenia Chikunova (Moscow)
Elizaveta Klevanovich (Tyumen)
Daria S. Ustinova (Kamensk-Uralsky)
Svetlana Chimrova (Moscow)
Anna Egorova (Kaliningrad)
Nastasia Fesikov (Penza)
Maria Kameneva (Orenburg)
Anastasiya Kirpichnikova (Yekaterinburg)
Arina Surkova (Novokuznetsk)
Maria Temnikova (Yekaterinburg)
Daria Ustinova (Kaminsk-Uralsky)
Yuliya Yefimova (Volgodonsk)
Veronika Andrusenko (Volgograd)
Valeriya Salamantina (Moscow)
Table Tennis
Kirill Skachkov (Novokuznetsk)
Polina Mikhaylova (St. Petersburg)
Yana Noskova (Moscow)
Taekwondo
Mikhail Artamonov (St. Petersburg)
Maksim Khramtsov (Nizhnevartovsk)
Vladislav Larin (Kotkozero)
Tatiana Kudashova (Chelyabinsk)
Tennis
Aslan Karatsev (Moscow)
K.A. Khachanov (Dubai, U.A.E.)
Daniil Medvedev (Monte Carlo, Monaco)
Andrey Rublev; Jr. (Moscow)
Ekaterina Alexandrova (Prague, Czech Republic)
Daria Kasatkina (Barcelona, Spain)
Veronika Kudermetova (Moscow)
Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova (Moscow)
Vera Zvonereva (Moscow)
Elena Vesnina (Sochi)
Volleyball
Viacheslav Krasilnikov (Krasnodar)
Oleg Stoyanovskiy (Moscow)
Konstantin Semenov (Tokmak)
Ilya Leshukov (Yekaterinburg)
Ivan Iakovlev (St. Petersburg)
Denis Bogdan (Grodno)
Iaroslav Podlesnykh (Pyatigorsk)
Igor Kobzar (Surgut)
Pavel Pankov (Moscow)
Maxim Mikhaylov (Kuzmolovsky)
Viktor Poletaev (Chelyabinsk)
Ilyas Kurkaev (Biysk)
Artem Volvich (Nizhnevartovsk)
Egor Kliuka (Kobryn, Belarus)
Dmitry Volkov (Novokuybyshevsk)
Valentin Golubev (Zavety Ilyicha)
Nadezda Makroguzova (Krasnodar)
Svetlana Kholomina (Obninsk)
Ksenia Smirnova (Nizhny Novgorod)
Ekaterina Enina (Chelyabinsk)
Anna Podkopaevna (Ulyanovsk)
Polina Matveeva (Odintsovo)
Daria Pilipenko (Nizhny Novgorod)
Arina Fedorovtseva (Kazan)
Natalia Goncharova (Skole, Ukraine)
Irina Koroleva (Novosibirsk)
Yevgeniya Startseva (Chelyabinsk)
Irina Fetisov (St. Petersburg)
Irina Voronkov (Moscow)
Anna Lazareva (Moscow)
Water Polo
Maria Beresneva (Moscow)
Anna Ustiukhina (Moscow)
Ekaterina Prokofyeva (Volgodonsk)
Elvina Karimova (Chelyabinsk)
Maria Borisova (Moscow)
Olga Gorgunova (Chelyabinsk)
Alena Serzhantova (Moscow)
Anastasia Simanovich (St. Petersburg)
Anna Timofeeva (Nizhny Novgorod)
Yevgeniya Soboleva-Khokhriakova (Kirishi)
Evgeniya Ivanova (Nizhny Novgorod)
Anastasia Fedotova (Moscow)
Anna Karnaukh (St. Petersburg)
Weightlifting
Timur Naniev (Vladikavkaz)
Kristina Sobol (Salsk)
Wrestling
Zaur Uguev (Khasavyurt)
Gadzhimurad Rashidov (Gubden)
Zaurbek Sidakov (Beslan)
Artur Naifonov (Nizhnevartovsk)
Abdulrashid Sadulaev (Tsurib)
Sergey Kozyrev (Moscow)
Sergey Emelin (Ruzayevka)
Artem Surkov (Saransk)
Aleksandr Chekhirkin (Rostov-Na-Dan)
Musa Evloev (Ingushetia)
Sergey Semenov (Tula)
Stalvira Orshush (Ulan-Ude)
Olga Khoroshavtseva (Khrasnoyarsk)
Valeria Koblova (Yegoryevsk)
Lyubov Ovcharova (Belorechensk)
Khanum Valieva (Khrasnoyarsk)
Natalia Norobieva (Tulun)
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yuppie-devil · 10 months
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there is unique dialogue that plays when chapman, after quitting the 3rd floor, goes into the elevator while rostov is still in there when she was trying to um. eat brian
thank you to my sibling for finding this for me, I can’t believe there’s still stuff I haven’t discovered after the countless times I’ve played this game
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allcrncthing · 3 years
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HERO ALIAS :: Irina
Aelita was given her powers whilst her mother was still pregnant with her. During a trip to Greece her mother saved an elderly woman from being hit by a car. Little did she know, that old woman was the goddess Eirene in disguise. Grateful for the act of kindness, Eirene blessed the unborn child. It only felt right to use her superhero alias as a way to honor the Greek goddess.
BIRTH NAME :: Aelita Irinushka Fadeyeva
NICKNAMES :: Lita, Alf, Lovey, Kiddo
AGE :: 24
BIRTHDAY :: May 9, 1998
SEXUALITY :: Bisexual
ETHNICITY :: Russian
NATIONALITY :: Russian
PLACE OF BIRTH :: Taganrog, Rostov Oblast, Russia
LANGUAGES SPOKEN :: | FLUENT | Russian, English, German
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Aelita is an adaptable individual, she often credits this to being raised by a “ go with the flow ” mother. Despite being raised by an easy-going soul, she is often the serious one of the group. She takes even the smallest set backs serious. Rina and Flynn try to loosen her up but nothing has worked. She is just a firm person. Aelita is also quite the perfectionist. If something isn’t up to her high, high standards, it’s trash. While the other Avengers get annoyed with her, sometimes when she’s helping them with stuff it actually comes in handy. Out of the group Aelita is the most calming being. Her aura just puts one at ease. Sometimes it’s due to her powers, other times it’s just because of Aelita being Aelita. She is extremely dedicated to helping others whenever possible. She wants to be of service even if it kills her. 
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FACECLAIM :: Yudina Svetlana Dmitriyevna “ LANA ”
HEIGHT :: 5′7″
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AFFILIATIONS :: Avengers ( 2016; 2023 ), All or Nothing ( 2016 - 2023 )
POWERS :: Peace manipulation
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She is really good a mimicking the other Avengers. Aelita does the best Thor impression out of the bunch.
She was taught all of her fighting skills by Natasha Romanoff. When Aelita was added to the Avengers, they were so interested with her powers they didn’t think to check if she could fight. After seeing her ass get so badly beaten by Harvest, Natasha took it upon herself to train the girl.
Aelita often says Steve Rogers vouching for her to be added to All or Nothing as the proudest day of her life.
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sofyalexandrovna · 3 years
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headcanon dump about sonya and her immediate family:
her mother began suffering from consumption when she was around five years old. they sent her away to live with her father’s brother, count ilya, to keep her from getting sick too. her father contracted the disease not long after and both her parents eventually succumbed to infection, leaving sonya as an orphan at her uncle’s house.
sonya’s maternal relatives, the davydovs, did want to reach out and offer to take her in as well, but their finances were in disarray at the time and they felt it would be better for her to stay elsewhere.
since she was orphaned at a really young age, sonya doesn’t remember much about either of her parents.
upon moving away to stay in voronezh with her maternal relatives ( re: canon divergent ending ), she lives with her late mother’s older sister, daria. daria and her husband, radovan, never had any children so they were very happy to have her stay with them. plenty of the other davydovs lived around the same area.
slava is almost ten years older than sonya is. he was engaged to be married during the war, but his fiancée eventually married someone else while he was off fighting.
when she accepts slava’s proposal, she becomes a baroness through their marriage. their wedding was a very small, simple affair; sonya doesn’t mean to not invite the rostovs, but it all just happened so quickly and both of them were too wrapped up in one another to bother with too many attendees. she did write to natasha immediately the day after, though.
their twin boys, alexei and yaroslav, look like a perfect balance of both sonya and slava; irina and valeria look more like slava, and yulia looks exactly like sonya.
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Victims of Andrei Chikatilo the Rostov Ripper
Victim #1- Lena Zakotnova, (female, 9 yrs. old)
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Victim #2- Larisa Tkachenko, (female, 17 yrs. old)
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Victim #3- Lyubov Biryuk, (female,13 yrs. old)
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Victim #4- Lyubov Volobuyeva, (female, 14 yrs. old)
No known photos exist of Lyubov.
Victim #5- Oleg Pozhidayev, (male, 9 yrs. old) 
No known photographs of Oleg exist.
Victim #6- Olga Kuprina, (female, 14 yrs. old)
No known photos exist of Olga.
Victim #7- Irina Karabelnikova, (female, 19 yrs. old)
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Victim #8- Sergey Kuzmin, (male, 15 yrs. old)
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Victim #9- Olga Stalmachenok, (female, 10 yrs. old)
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Victim #10- Laura Sarkisyan, (female, 15 yrs. old)
No known photos of Laura exist.
Victim #11-  Irina Dunenkova, (female, 13 yrs. old)
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Victim #12- Lyudmila Kushuba, (female, 24 yrs. old)
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Victim #13-  Igor Gudkov, (male, 7 yrs. old)
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Victim #14-  Valentina Chuchulina, (female, 22 yrs. old)
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Victim #15- Unknown woman, (female, between the ages of 18-25)
Victim #16- Vera Shevkun, (female, 19 yrs. old)
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Victim #17- Sergey Markov, (male, 14 yrs. old)
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Victim #18- Natalya Shalapinina, (female, 17 yrs. old)
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Victim #19- Marta Ryabenko, (female, 45 yrs. old)
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Victim #20- Dmitriy Ptashnikov, (male, 10 yrs. old)
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Victim #21- Tatyana Petrosyan, (female, 32 yrs. old)
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Victim #22- Svetlana Petrosyan, (female, 11 yrs. old)
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Victim #23- Yelena Bakulina, (female, 22 yrs. old)
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Victim #24- Dmitriy Illarionov, (male, 13 yrs. old)
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Victim #25- Anna Lemesheva, (female, 19 yrs. old)
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Victim #26- Svetlana Tsana, (female, 20 yrs. old)
No known photos of Svetlana exist.
Victim #27-  Natalya Golosovskaya, (female, 16 yrs. old)
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Victim #28- Lyudmila Alekseyeva, (female, 17 yrs. old)
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Victim #29- Unknown woman, (female,between the ages of 20-25)
Victim #30- Akmaral Seydaliyeva, (female,11 yrs. old)
No known photos exist of Akmaral.
Victim #31- Alexander Chepel, (male, 11 yrs. old)
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Victim #32- Irina Luchinskaya, (female, 24 yrs. old)
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Victim #33- Natalya Pokhlistova, (female, 18 yrs. old)
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Victim #34- Irina Gulyayeva, (female, 18 yrs. old)
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Victim #35- Oleg Makarenkov, (male, 13 yrs. old)
No known photographs exist of Oleg.
Victim #36-  Ivan Bilovetskiy, (male, 12 yrs. old)
No known photographs exist of Ivan.
Victim #37-  Yuri Tereshonok, (male, 16 yrs. old)
No known photographs exist of Yuri.
Victim #38- Unknown, (female, between the ages of 18-25)
Victim #39- Alexey Voronko, (male, 9 yrs. old)
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Victim #40- Yevgeniy Muratov, (male, 15 yrs. old)
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Victim #41- Tatyana Ryzhova, (female, 16 yrs. old)
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Victim #42- Alexander Dyakonov, (male, 8 yrs. old)
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Victim #43- Alexey Moiseyev, (male, 10 yrs. old)
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Victim #44- Helena Varga, (female, 19 yrs. old)
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Victim #45- Alexey Khobotov, (male, 10 yrs. old)
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Victim #46- Andrei Kravchenk, (male, 11 yrs. old)
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Victim #47- Yaroslav Makarov, (male, 10 yrs. old)
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Victim #48- Lyubov Zuyeva, (female, 31 yrs. old)
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Victim #49- Viktor Petrov, (male, 13 yrs. old)
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Victim #50- Ivan Fomin, (male, 11 yrs. old)
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Victim #51- Vadim Gromov, (male, 16 yrs. old)
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Victim #52- Viktor Tishchenko, (male, 16 yrs. old)
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Victim #53- Svetlana Korostik, (female, 22 yrs. old)
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May everyone who died at the hands of Chikatilo and their families find peace.
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blogtintonghop24h · 3 years
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Cụ bà chết cóng giữa băng tuyết lạnh giá, hành động của các nhân chứng gây ra cái chết bi kịch gây phẫn nộ tột cùng
Ngày 21/12 vừa qua, một sinh viên đang học tại trường ở số 109 trên đường Dneprovsky, thuộc vùng Rostov (Nga) đã đăng tải một đoạn video và bức ảnh cho thấy cảnh tượng người phụ nữ chết cóng giữa băng tuyết lạnh giá lên mạng xã hội và nhanh chóng thu hút sự chú ý của đông đảo cư dân mạng, buộc các nhà chức trách phải vào cuộc điều tra. Sau khi chân tướng sự việc được tiết lộ, nhiều người lại càng phẫn nộ hơn nữa.
Phóng viên của trang tin tức 161.RU (Nga) đã thu thập được một số thông tin xung quanh vụ việc. Theo đó, văn phòng công tố và Ủy ban điều tra Nga cho biết người phụ nữ này 61 tuổi. Giám đốc của ngôi trường, bà Irina Glebezdina, cho biết vào ngày hôm đó, có một phụ nữ đi ngang qua và bước vào phòng bảo vệ cầu cứu sự giúp đỡ vì bà cảm thấy không được khỏe.
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Hình ảnh cho thấy người phụ nữ chết cóng dưới cái giá lạnh tê tái của mùa đông nước Nga.
Thay vì đưa cụ bà vào phòng sưởi ấm trong lúc gọi và đợi xe cấp cứu đến thì nhân viên bảo vệ lại để bà đứng dưới tiết trời giá lạnh, băng tuyết phủ trắng xóa. Sau đó, người này thấy bà yếu hơn thì mang một chiếc ghế ra "cho ngồi tạm".
Bà Irina cũng nhấn mạnh rằng có một y tá làm trong phòng y tế của trường đã ra gặp bà cụ và gọi xe cứu thương.
Nhưng điều khiến dư luận đặt câu hỏi là tại sao nhân viên y tế kia có chuyên môn nhưng không đưa bà cụ vào phòng và thăm khám hoặc làm điều gì đó trước khi xe cứu thương đến.
Trang tin 161.RU cũng đã phỏng vấn một nhân chứng và nhận được câu trả lời rằng: "Người phụ nữ vào trường và nói rằng bà ấy đang cảm thấy tồi tệ, nhờ gọi bác sĩ nhưng người ta bắt bà ấy đứng đợi xe cấp cứu ngoài đường và được đưa cho một chiếc ghế ngồi". Đồng thời, nguồn tin này cũng cho biết trường không có y tá trực vào thời điểm đó nhưng có bác sĩ thăm khám cho cụ bà.
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Các nhà điều tra đã khám xét khu vực trường học này, phỏng vấn các nhân chứng và ra lệnh khám nghiệm pháp y. Không có dấu vết bạo lực trên cơ thể cụ bà. Hiện vẫn chưa rõ nguyên nhân vì sao bà tử vong.
Một bà mẹ có tên Yana đã viết trong phần bình luận của nhóm Rostov Glavny trên mạng xã hội VKontakte: "Tôi đưa con đi qua khu vực đó lúc 12h10, một đám trẻ con chạy nhảy nô đùa. Tôi đã thấy người phụ nữ này. Bà ấy ngồi ở chỗ cũ, chỉ che cơ thể bằng tấm vải vụn đến thắt lưng. Một cậu bé hàng xóm nhà tôi nói rằng cậu bé đã nhìn thấy người phụ nữ này vào buổi sáng, vào khoảng 8 giờ 20 phút, bà ấy đang nằm trên tuyết, bà ấy được nhấc lên và đặt lên một chiếc ghế".
Một phụ huynh khác tên Irina trả lời phỏng vấn của phóng viên 161.RU rằng: "Tôi đi bộ đến đó vào khoảng 11 giờ 45 phút, vì giờ học của con kết thúc lúc 12 giờ 10 phút. Chúng tôi có một lối vào riêng dành cho phụ huynh đón con, không phải lối vào chính. Khi xe cấp cứu đến, tôi không thấy bà cụ đâu nữa, chỉ có một cảnh sát và chiếc xe màu trắng và cáng. Bà ấy được phủ cái gì đó, tôi không nhớ rõ lắm".
Sự việc đang gây phẫn nộ trong dư luận nước Nga vì cách hành xử của những người làm việc trong ngôi trường.
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