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Question To Putin: Is Inter-Ethnic Peace Possible In A Country Where Murdering Asians Is Considered A Less Serious Crime Than Fist-Fighting With White Russians? – OpEd

Question To Putin: Is Inter-Ethnic Peace Possible In A Country Where Murdering Asians Is Considered A Less Serious Crime Than Fist-Fighting With White Russians? – OpEd
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Gaudeamus 30/ Bilingual album Roma Holocaust Album of memory and recognition launched

Gaudeamus 30/ Bilingual album

NATO Deputy SecGen Geoana at release of Afghanistan - Faces of War volume: We are not allowed to forget

Ban of Sakha Films Signals Uncertain Future for Russia s Regional Movie Industries

For nearly two months now dedicated cinephiles in Russia have been engrossed in a public row over the fate of “Ayta,” an award-winning thriller by Yakutian director Stepan Burnashev.  The movie was effectively banned by the Kremlin in September in a move that caused widespread public outrage and made many fear for the future of regional film industries.  In the latest turn of events, Alexander Dyukov, a member of the Presidential Commission on Interethnic Relations, last week described “Ayta” as “textbook nationalistic cinema.” “This is a perfect example of a nationalistic movie, filmed in an ethnocratic republic where silent ethnic cleansing has already taken place: within 30 years, the number of Russians [living in Yakutia] has decreased by exactly half,” Dyukov wrote to his over 18,000 subscribers on Telegram.  “Ayta,” which has become the highest-grossing film ever in the Far East republic of Sakha (Yakutia), tells the story of a standoff between indigenous

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