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#olga misik
higherentity · 11 months
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... Il y a des choses à ne jamais faire, ni de jour ni de nuit, ni par mer ni par terre par exemple, la guerre...
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Le courage est aussi côté russe. Olga Misik, jeune militante anti-Poutine de 19 ans, opposante à la guerre en Ukraine, qui manifeste en lisant la constitution russe qui autorise les manifestations pacifistes. Sous le regard de la police qui hésite à intervenir. Image très forte
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Courage is also on the Russian side. Olga Misik, a 19-year-old anti-Putin activist, opponent of the war in Ukraine, who demonstrates by reading the Russian constitution which allows peaceful demonstrations. Under the gaze of the police who hesitate to intervene
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Was sentenced to 2 years and 2 months for attending a demonstration at the Rachmaninova Memorial There she sat in front of an OMON member and read him 31. article of the Russian Constitution, which declares citizens' right to non-violent assembly
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noisynutcrusade · 1 year
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Turin Ebook Truthful 2023: visitors and programme
Public success for the Ebook Truthful, and for the protagonists of the Area Robinson initiatives (yesterday with Olga Misik, Concita De Gregorio, Bergonzoni, Zero limestone and lots of others). ALL VIDEOS OF MEETINGS 12:58 Fois: “Michela Murgia is sick, she will’t be on the Robinson Area” “Michelle Murgia he is sick: he cannot be right here on the Area Robinson and the occasion on the…
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odinsblog · 2 years
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I am always humbled and very deeply impressed whenever common, ordinary, everyday people risk their wellbeing to protest corrupt governments, whether those governments be American, British, Israeli, Chinese or Russian. Protesters might make their dissent look easy, but I know that defiantly standing up for what’s right always, always, always, always comes at great personal risk. Always. 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦
👉🏿 https://news.yahoo.com/russian-activists-journalists-targeted-putin-121223629.html
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Olga Misik, 19, made herself famous by reading the constitution to riot policemen. She is now facing two years in prison "for using force on police". Sentence due on May 11 (russia). In her final word, she says that she was inspired by Sophie Scholl, an antifascist executed by nazis in 1943.
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awed-frog · 5 years
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“I just wanted to remind [the police] that we are here with peaceful purposes and without weapons, but they are not.
Injustice always concerns everyone.
It is foolish to think that this is a rally only for free elections or the admission of candidates. This is a rally in defence of elementary constitutional rights that would not be questioned in a democratic state.”
Olga Misik, 17, reads the Constitution - which affirms the right to peaceful gatherings - in front of the Moscow riot police.
[Background: pro-democracy demonstrations have been held in the Russian capital to protest against the ban of several opposition politicians from running in the September parliamentary elections and to call for more freedom and transparency. Olga was later arrested and charged, as were about one thousand other protestors.]
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toscanoirriverente · 5 years
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"Ho letto l'articolo 31 della Costituzione, che prevede la libertà di assemblea, il 29 sulla libertà di parola, e l'articolo 3, che descrive il popolo come la principale fonte del potere: volevo spiegare agli agenti che la gente si era radunata pacificamente, senza armi, e quindi legalmente". Olga Misik a soli 17 anni è diventata il simbolo dell'ultima ondata di proteste contro il Cremlino, reo di aver sbarrato la strada ai candidati indipendenti delle municipali di Mosca.
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viraltiger · 5 years
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Olga Misik, a Russian teen reading the Constitution aloud while being swarmed by riot police - See more viral images on ViralTiger.org
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russianreader · 5 years
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Mikola Dziadok: What We Can Learn from the Moscow Protests
Mikola Dziadok: What We Can Learn from the Moscow Protests
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Olga Misik, 17, reading the Russian Constitution aloud to riot cops during a July 27 “unauthorized” opposition protest rally in Moscow at which nearly 1,400 protesters were detained by regular police and Russian National Guardsmen. Photo courtesy of the Independent
Mikola Dziadok Facebook August 4, 2019
Lessons of the Moscow Protests
Yesterday, Moscow witnessed one of the largest protest rallies…
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calllen · 2 years
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Russian troops form a mob to arrest teenager Olga Misik while she reads Article 31 of the Russian constitution that guarantees the right to a peaceful protest. - https://i.redd.it/5aflavuelqn81.png
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I dont know if there are enough soldiers. They should request reinforcements.
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the sun is still shining
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19-year-old Russia Olga Misik was sentenced to 2 years and 2 months last week, for attending a demonstration at the Rachmaninova Memorial in Moscow. At the demonstration, she sat in front of an OMON member (on the figure) ) and read him 31. article of the Russian Constitution, which declares citizen s' right to non-violent assembly.
Olga Misik delivered a breathtaking speech before the court. Here are some thoughts from her worth reading and remember: ′′ People often ask: Are you afraid? Those who don't live in Russia are asking this most because they don't quite understand the reality of Russia. They don't know banging on doors in the middle of the night, arresting and imprisonment without reason. They don't realize the feeling of despair we sucked with mother's milk. And this feeling of despair has taught us to live in hopelessness, but at the same time it weakens fear. Fear loses sense if you have no influence on your future.
I've never been afraid. I felt despair, hopelessness, helplessness, disorientation, anxiety, frustration, burnout, but never fear. I wasn't afraid when the armed men invaded our apartment and threatened to jail. They wanted to scare me but I wasn't afraid. I laughed and joked knowing that the moment I stop laughing I would be lost."
′′ When they drove me in a black van, I thought that this sunrise would be the last one I'd see. I was thinking about my father who I first saw crying in my life. To my mom who whispered in my ear: don't confess anything. I was sad and full of pain but I had no fear.
However, during the last nine months (in prison) I was afraid continually. I haven't really slept once since the first night. Every night I woke up to different sounds and imagined steps in the hallway. I was photographed by panic at the sound of cars passing under the window... Someone said it was impossible to be afraid when you know they were right. But Russia teaches us to be afraid. It's a country that tries to kill you every day, and if you're not part of the system, you might be dead already.
Of course I took part in the protest. I don't regret it and I'm proud of my actions. I didn't really have a choice though. I had to do what was in my power, so there's no point in regretting anything. And if I got that opportunity again, I'd do it again. Even if I was threatened with execution, I would do it again. I would do it again and again until some change started. They say doing the same things all the time and expecting a different result is the definition of madness. Perhaps hope is a manifestation of madness. But not doing what you believe in, just because someone around you thinks it's not meaningful, is only learned hopelessness. And it's better to be crazy in the eyes of the world than to be a creature without hope in your own eyes.... But you who jail me and reject all arguments of defense and accept all false evidence of plaintiffs, you know very well what crime you commit. But you can't ban youth. You can't ban freedom. You cannot suppress the truth.
This trial will affect your lives far more than mine. I chose where I stand. It's now up to you to choose the path you will go in life. If you condemn me, you will condemn yourself..."
′′ A fascist government never seems to be fascist from the inside. It only looks like occasional and illogical censorship and some repressions that don't affect you. But I'm not the only one in this process. Today you don't decide my fate, you decide your own. You can't lie to yourself forever. You know what's going on. You know where good is and where evil, freedom and fascism, love and hate are, and if you decide not to join the right side, it will be a colossal lie from you. Those who chose evil have prepaid tickets to The Hague.
I don't promise to win tomorrow, the day after tomorrow, in a year or in a decade. But one day we will prevail, because love and youth will always prevail. I can't promise I will live to see it, but I hope you live to see it."
′′ The past nine months have been difficult and I asked myself if something could have happened differently. But I was just telling myself because nothing could be different. From the moment I took the institution into my hands, my fate was carved in stone and I accept it with pride. I made the right decision and for such a totalitarian state will always be paid with a high price. I always knew I'd end up in jail one day. I knew what I did wasn't stupidity or misfortune or coincidence and not a crime. I always knew this would happen and I was always ready. I'm not surprised by anything."
′′ The Nazist regime fell one day, just as the fascist regime in Russia falls. I don't know when but one day it will happen. The last words of Sophia Scholl (German student and anti-Nazist warrior executed by Nazist in 1943) before the execution were: ′′ The sun is still shining." Really, the sun is still shining. I can't see him from behind the walls of prison, but I always know he's there. And if now, in these dark times, we can turn to the light, maybe there is no victory that far."
(According to Diary N, Martin M. Šimečka, 16.5.2021)
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Olga Misik and her lovely smile, while holding a picket saying: ''Smile, if you are against Putin''. What a powerful message in our dark times March 22 2023
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corallorosso · 3 years
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Olga Misik. Studentessa russa 19enne. Attivista, detta anche “la Greta di Mosca”. Il regime del diversamente democratico Putin l’ha appena condannata a due anni e due mesi di misure restrittive della libertà. A Olga è stato anche imposto un coprifuoco ad hoc, durante il quale non potrà uscire di casa fra le dieci di sera e le sei del mattino. Il suo reato? Efferato: tenetevi forte. Insieme ad altri due ragazzi, Ivan Vorobyevsky e Igor Basharimov, è stata giudicata colpevole di vandalismo per aver affisso un poster in sostegno dei prigionieri politici sulla facciata degli uffici della procura generale e macchiato una guardiola di fronte al palazzo nell’agosto del 2020. Un “gravissimo” danno economico, quantificato dall’accusa in ben 47 euro. Le misure restrittive per gli altri due ragazzi dureranno un anno e nove mesi. Olga è già ai domiciliari da nove mesi. È divenuta particolarmente nota quando, nel luglio del 2019, durante una manifestazione contro il bando alla candidatura di esponenti del movimento di Aleksei Navalny alle elezioni comunali di Mosca, si è seduta sul selciato e ha letto la Costituzione. Di fronte a lei, schierate, c’erano le forze anti sommossa. Come se Olga fosse una pericolosissima terrorista. Quando sentite Salvini e Meloni celebrare Putin, ricordatevi che dalle sue parti (o da quelle degli Orban) gli oppositori politici quando va “bene” finiscono in galera per delle cazzate. E quando va male finiscono. E basta. Andrea Scanzi
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noisynutcrusade · 1 year
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Olga Misik: "The Russian repression on my skin, more and more terrible"
“Russia is not Putin. In twenty years, the Russians have tried so hard to protest. Olga Misik is an example”, says the journalist of the Republic Rosalba Castelletti who on the stage of Arena Robinson interviewed the Russian activist who at 16 made a very strong and revolutionary gesture: sitting down with his legs crossed to read the Constitution in front of the forces of order in the midst of…
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pensamentofeminista · 5 years
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Durante protestos pró-democracia em Moscou no último sábado, Olga Misik, uma garota de 17 anos, ficou sentada em frente a policiais lendo a constituição Russa que garante o direito à manifestações pacíficas. “Eu só queria lembra-los (polícia) que nós estamos aqui de forma pacífica e sem armas, mas eles não.”
Lute como uma garota! ✊🏻✊🏽✊🏿
Conteúdo: Quebrando o Tabu.
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gambinijournal · 4 years
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Women Rise Up part1
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An old women confronts Hong Kong police.
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Polish women take a part in a Breastfeeding Is Not Obscene protest in Warsaw.
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Police in Honduras represses demonstration of women against gender violence.
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Against injustice and oppression in Russia. Olga Misik reading the Russian constitution while being surrounded by armed Russian riot police.
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A young woman Alaa Salah, an architecture student, is leading powerful protest chants against president Omar al-Bashir.
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Woman stands up to more than three hundreds nazis and refuses to let them pass in Sweden.
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Young female protester. Pro-democracy protest in Chile.
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Brazil women on the streets. Protests for a better future.
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Palestinian girls against Israeli troops.
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Chile, Santiago.
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