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midwich cuckoo
23-04-2007, 03:46 PM
Just heard on Sky News that former Russian leader Boris Yeltsin has died...

father ted
23-04-2007, 03:55 PM
Tell me more. He seemed to be a probable mind control slave.

midwich cuckoo
23-04-2007, 03:56 PM
Former Russian President Yeltsin Dies

Updated: 14:54, Monday April 23, 2007

Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin has died at the age of 76.

A Kremlin spokesman gave no further information and did not say how Mr Yeltsin had died, though it is known that he had heart problems.

Mr Yeltsin became President in June 1991 and held the post until Vladimir Putin took over in 1999.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30200-1262163,00.html

lumukanda
23-04-2007, 04:44 PM
hey MC, whats with the big ad thingy? can you take it down?

midwich cuckoo
23-04-2007, 05:28 PM
I must have copied and pasted an advert, sorry I didn't notice it. :o

december
23-04-2007, 07:57 PM
He seemed to be a probable mind control slave.

Sure!
He was controled with vodka by the Jews.


http://img.timeinc.net/time/europe/html/031110/images/yeltsin.jpg

Jew Mikhail Khodorkovsky with President Yeltsin


But now there is new guy in town and the Jews are in prison or fled to Israel...

http://img.rian.ru/images/4327/78/43277851.jpg



Mikhail Khodorkovsky in his new office - :D

http://img.timeinc.net/time/europe/magazine/2006/1204/khodorkovsky.jpg

december
23-04-2007, 07:59 PM
Russia's first President Yeltsin dies at 76 of heart failure
19:10 | 23/ 04/ 2007

MOSCOW, April 23 (RIA Novosti) -- Boris Yeltsin, Russia's first ever democratically elected leader (1991-1999), has died at the age of 76 of long-term heart trouble.

The former president died at 3:45 p.m. Moscow time (11.45 a.m. GMT) in a Moscow hospital of chronic heart problems, which resulted in massive organ failure, Sergei Mironov, the top Kremlin doctor, said.

Yeltsin was born in Sverdlovsk (now Yekaterinburg) in 1931 and trained at the local Urals Polytechnic Institute.

Yeltsin began his career in the construction business (1953-1968). He joined the Communist Party in 1961 and became first secretary of the party in the Sverdlovsk Region in 1976 and a member of the party's central committee in 1981. In 1985, then Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev appointed Yeltsin to head the Communist Party's Moscow branch, and in 1986 made him a non-voting member of the party's ruling Politburo.

In October 1987, he was forced to resign from the party leadership and in 1988 from the Politburo after he challenged hardliners and criticized Gorbachev's reforms. He was appointed a deputy construction minister.

In 1989, Yeltsin won elections to the Supreme Soviet (parliament), was elected Russian president by that body, and resigned from the Communist Party. He retained the presidency in the popular election in 1991, when he became Russia's first democratically elected president and Gorbachev's main liberal opponent.

In August 1991, Yeltsin led the resistance to the coup by Communist hard-liners, when Gorbachev was detained at his country house. The success of opposition to the coup shifted power to reformers. In December 1991, he helped found the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), a new alliance in which Soviet republics were declared independent. Thereby, Yeltsin helped end attempts to preserve the Soviet Union. Gorbachev resigned as president December 25.

In September 1993, Yeltsin issued a decree to dissolve the Supreme Soviet and hold parliamentary elections. A month later, he ordered the armed suppression of a coup by former Supreme Soviet members led by Vice-President Alexander Rutskoi.

As president, Yeltsin moved to end state control of the economy and oversaw sweeping privatization deals, which brought fortunes to a handful of Kremlin-connected businessmen. Economic difficulties and political opposition slowed the reform.

In 1994, Yeltsin ordered the suppression of Dzhokhar Dudayev's separatist regime in Chechnya. The military campaign in the breakaway republic ended in September 1996 when Russia withdrew all its troops from the republic, thereby, de facto granting Chechnya independence.

In June 1996, he ran for the presidency again and defeated his main communist contender Gennady Zyuganov in the runoff elections in July.

In November 1996, Yeltsin underwent quadruple heart bypass surgery and was confined to the hospital for months and appeared in public less frequently. Moreover, in the late 1990s, Russia was hit by a series of economic crises and frequent cabinet reshuffles.

On New Year's Eve in 1999, Yeltsin surprised the nation by announcing his resignation and appointing then Prime Minister Vladimir Putin acting president.

He is survived by his wife, daughter, grandchildren and great grandchildren.

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070423/64205468.html

lumukanda
23-04-2007, 11:03 PM
I must have copied and pasted an advert, sorry I didn't notice it. :o

no problem MC, all good. :)

tinmenace
24-04-2007, 12:11 AM
Kremlin spokesman Alexander Smirnov said Yeltsin died, but gave no cause of death or further information.

Click for Source (http://www.dailystar.co.uk/news_detail_pa.html?sku=11773411811847541-H0)


LOL! Sorry, couldn't help laughing when I saw that guys name!

http://www.student.unimaas.nl/c.rigal/myweb/smirnoff.jpg

premasai
24-04-2007, 02:17 AM
LOL! Sorry, couldn't help laughing when I saw that guys name!

http://www.student.unimaas.nl/c.rigal/myweb/smirnoff.jpg

Some wrote here that he was a slave. Sure. He was ... slave of alcohol. I remeber seeing him drunk many times while official situations. I actually am surprised that he got that far (I mean 76 years).

tinmenace
24-04-2007, 02:23 AM
Yeah, what a coincidence, eh? Sounds like loomie-talk....:D

father ted
24-04-2007, 07:02 AM
He may have had alchohol problems but I still think he was a probable mind control slave. Bush is far worse (regarding addictions) than yeltsin ever was, we all knew about yeltsin's problems but how come we never hear about bush's?

premasai
24-04-2007, 07:38 AM
He may have had alchohol problems but I still think he was a probable mind control slave. Bush is far worse (regarding addictions) than yeltsin ever was, we all knew about yeltsin's problems but how come we never hear about bush's?

You might be right. I still wonder why they decided to remove Gorbatchev who was really bright mind and replace him with this Yeltsin - communist apparatus member and nothing more. It is possible that it was done to better control him and Russia.

hagbard_celine
24-04-2007, 11:09 AM
I can't believe John Major etc coming out and going on about what a nice guy he was! Why don't they interview someone from Chechnya and see what they say!?:mad:

december
24-04-2007, 07:21 PM
http://img.rian.ru/images/4327/77/43277752.jpg

President of the Russian Federation Boris Yeltsin, U.S.S.R. President Mikhail Gorbachev and U.S. President George Bush attending an official dinner on behalf of Mikhail and Raisa Gorbachev in July 1991.




LOL! Sorry, couldn't help laughing when I saw that guys name!

http://www.student.unimaas.nl/c.rigal/myweb/smirnoff.jpg

That's a good one, tinmenace!

I guess it was Yeltsin himself who selected a guy with this sort of name just to remind him of the good times when the Jews payed him well for selling Russia off...

But now Putin kicked them out, so the Jews are doing evrything they can to discredit new Russia's president.

"Putin has committed a far greater crime in the minds of the Jewish media. He is Russian. A real Russian. Although he came to power with back door political manipulation and with the aid of some Jewish allies, underneath he has always had a Russian soul waiting for the chance to assert itself.

As Putin gained more and more power in the Russian hierarchy he began to assert himself and eventually broke with Berezovsky and Gusinsky and a number of the Jewish Oligarchs. Since that time their have been thousands of sympathetic articles about Berezovsky and Gusinsky and articles about the lawlessness of Putin for daring to prosecute these men. Recently, Berezovsky’s biggest critic was gunned down on the streets of Moscow. Now this is the kind of man that the Jewish-dominated media loves!

Putin has not acted against all of the Oligarchs. He was too much of a cold war chess player to do that, but he went against any of them who tried to assert power over him, much like Stalin did decades earlier. Berezovsky and Gusinsky (the gangster Gusinsky who was head of the Russian Jewish Congress) are now Putin’s most bitter enemies. No other leader in the western world would dare to go after such powerful Jewish supremacist.

The latest case is that of Michael Khodorkovsky of Yukos Oil. Through graft and corruption Khodorkovsky obtained billions of dollars of oil leases for a pittance in the mid-nineties. But as he amassed his incredible wealth he decided he had the right to determine the political fate of Russia.

In fact, he had the chutzpah to boast of that fact he will buy the Russian Duma. Putin, feeling threatened, and rightfully so, questioned why a man who stole billions of dollars from the Russian people then would have the right to corrupt government the same way as he obtained his oil leases. Khodorkovsky and almost all of the principle stockholders of Yukos are not only Jews but are in fact Israeli citizens, and many of the major stockholders (criminals) are now hiding out in Israel with the blessing of the Israeli government.

Putin and his government initiated prosecutions of these Jewish supremacist gangsters that have committed the worst thievery in history.

The reaction from the Jewish-dominated press in America and around the world is quite predictable. There has been a crescendo of criticism of Putin and universal defense of the “persecuted” Jewish oligarchs. Putin has even been accused of “anti-Semitism” for prosecuting these criminals.

Because Putin believes that the Russian people should own the press rather than citizens of Israel, he is called an enemy of a free press. Yet, how can any press be free when it is controlled by a people who view themselves more Jewish than Russian and have their own clear international agenda?

And today, as Bush calls for Russia to have a free press (translated: the Jewish criminal oligarchs such as Jewish mafia leader Berezovsky should control the press) they call on Russia to pass laws and prosecute Russians who dare to simply criticize the Jewish criminal oligarchs and the their allegiances to Israel and Jewish supremacism rather than to Russia and Russians".

http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/images/41060000/jpg/_41060657_apatit_1.jpg

A number one Illuminati man in Russia Michael Khodorkovsky (on the left) is right where he suppose to be.


http://img.rian.ru/images/6105/81/61058141.jpg

Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov rising to Mountain Psekhako by a new cable railroad, while visiting the Krasnaya Polyana ski resort in Sochi, on the Russian Black Sea coast.

http://img.rian.ru/images/6105/82/61058293.jpg

Russian President Vladimir Putin, in the foreground, visiting a tourist center at the Krasnaya Polyana ski resort in Sochi, on the Russian Black Sea coast.

december
24-04-2007, 07:56 PM
Vladimir Putin`s Address on the Occasion of Boris Yelstin’s Passing

April 23, 2007
Moscow

Boris Nikolaevich Yeltsin, the first President of Russia, has passed away. His presidency has inscribed him forever in Russian and in world history.

A person who began a new era has passed away. A new democratic Russia was born during his time: a free, open and peaceful country. A state in which the power truly does belong to the people.

The first President of Russia’s strength consisted in the mass support of Russian citizens for his ideas and aspirations. Thanks to the will and direct initiative of President Boris Yeltsin a new constitution, one which declared human rights a supreme value, was adopted. It gave people the opportunity to freely express their thoughts, to freely choose power in Russia, to realise their creative and entrepreneurial plans. This Constitution permitted us to begin building a truly effective Federation.

We knew Boris Nikolayevich as a brave and a warm-hearted, spiritual person. He was an upstanding and courageous national leader. And he was always very honest and frank while defending his position.

Boris Yeltsin assumed full responsibility for everything he called for, for everything he aspired to. For everything he tried to do and did do for the sake of Russia, for the sake of millions of Russians. And he invariably took upon himself, let it in his heart, all the trials and tribulations of Russia, peoples’ difficulties and problems.

And today I would like to express my most sincere and profound condolences to Naina Iosifovna and to Boris Nikolayevich’s friends and relatives.

We grieve with you. We will do everything to ensure that the memory of Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin, his noble thoughts and his words “take care of Russia” will always act as our moral and political watchwords.

I declare 25 April 2007 a day of national mourning.

http://kremlin.ru/eng/speeches/2007/04/23/2207_type82912_125079.shtml



Boris Yeltsin will be lying in state in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour from 16.30 24 April 2007 until 12.30 25 April 2007.

Entry into the Cathedral will be from Volkhonka St. (northern entrance).
Funeral wreathes can be left in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour as of 16.30 24 April 2007 (lower Cathedral, Church of the Transfiguration [Preobrashenskaia Church], entrance from the Moscow River side).

http://www.byzantines.net/epiphany/images/saviorcathedral.jpg

http://img.rian.ru/images/6427/94/64279414.jpg


People bid farewell to Yeltsin at Christ the Savior Cathedral
18:39 | 24/ 04/ 2007



MOSCOW, April 24 (RIA Novosti) - Hundreds of people have been queuing up in front of the Cathedral of Christ the Savior to bid farewell to the deceased first president of Russia, and over a thousand mourners have already paid tribute, a police spokesman said Tuesday.

Boris Yeltsin, who has been both praised as a champion of democratic reforms and criticized for impoverishing millions, died Monday of heart failure at the age of 76, and will be buried at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow Wednesday.

A 500-meter long queue has formed in front of the cathedral, where a memorial service began at 4:30 p.m. Police allowed mourners into the church in groups and said access to the cathedral would be provided all night. Many mourners left the cathedral with tears in their eyes.

The latest reports said the Russian Foreign Ministry has started a book of condolences, where the heads of diplomatic missions and offices of international organizations, as well as diplomats and foreigners would be able to leave messages from 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Tuesday and from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Wednesday. A ministry spokesman said similar books would be available at Russian Embassies abroad, where Russian flags will fly at half-mast Wednesday.

The Novodevichy cemetery, which dates back to the 16th century, is a burial ground for many Russian and Soviet writers, composers, scientists and politicians. Among other tombs, there is the grave of Lazar Kaganovich, one of Stalin's closest allies, and Nikita Khrushchev, a Soviet leader. Army General Alexander Lebed was buried there in 2002, and Raisa Gorbachev, the wife of the only Soviet president, was laid to rest there in 1999.

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070424/64291014.html

december
25-04-2007, 07:44 PM
http://img.rian.ru/images/6426/45/64264539.jpg



Yeltsin to be buried next to Gen. Lebed and Gorbachev's wife

24/ 04/ 2007


MOSCOW, April 24 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's first President Boris Yeltsin, who died at the age of 76 of heart failure Monday, will be buried next to his prominent army general and the wife of his political adversary, Mikhail Gorbachev.

A cemetery official said Yeltsin would be laid to rest Wednesday at the Novodevichy cemetery in Moscow near Alexander Lebed, a prominent army general, who died in a controversial helicopter crash in 2002 when he was governor of a Siberian Region. Lebed ran against Yeltsin in the 1996 presidential elections but was appointed head of the National Security Council and endorsed the president's candidacy in the runoff.

Another famous personality buried nearby is Raisa Gorbachev, the wife of Yeltsin's old rival and predecessor Mikhail Gorbachev. She died in 1999 of leukemia.

Mourners will be able to bid farewell to the former Russian president, who has been both praised as a champion of democratic reforms and criticized for condemning millions of people to poverty, in the Church of Christ the Savior in central Moscow from Tuesday afternoon till after midday Wednesday, the Kremlin press service said.

The day of the funeral, April 25, has been declared a day of national mourning for Russia's president who ran the country through the turbulent 1990s - from 1991 to 1999.

A Russian diplomatic source has said former U.S. presidents, Bill Clinton and George Bush senior, are expected to attend the funeral. But the U.S. Embassy in Moscow has refused to confirm the information.

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070424/64266118.html


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december
25-04-2007, 07:48 PM
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Russia's first post-Soviet leader Yeltsin laid to rest

25/ 04/ 2007


MOSCOW, April 25 (RIA Novosti) - Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin was buried in a central Moscow cemetery Wednesday following a memorial ceremony attended by Russian and foreign dignitaries and earlier by thousands of ordinary Russians.

Unlike former Soviet leaders who were buried on Red Square, Yeltsin was laid to rest in the Novodevichy cemetery alongside Russian and Soviet writers, composers, scientists and politicians. The funeral was preceded by a church ceremony, the first for a former head of state since the Bolshevik revolution.

The coffin was taken on a gun carriage to the cemetery, the funeral procession was followed by President Vladimir Putin, Mikhail Gorbachev, the first and last Soviet president whom Yeltsin helped to oust, and foreign dignitaries such as two former U.S. presidents, Bill Clinton and George Bush Sr., former British Prime Minister Sir John Major; Prince Andrew, the Duke of York, representing the British royal family.

Thousands of Russians lined the two-mile cortege route from the Christ the Savior Cathedral, demolished under Josef Stalin in the 1930s and reconstructed under Yeltsin, to the Novodevichy Monastery. Yeltsin's body had laid in state at the cathedral from Tuesday till Wednesday, where an estimated 25,000 Russians had paid their last respects to the former leader.

After the last farewells from the widow, Naina Yeltsin, with whom he had lived for half a century, and their two daughters, and a prayer, the coffin was closed. As it was lowered into the grave, the Kremlin regiment gave a three-gun salute, and the national anthem was played.

Yeltsin, praised by many for pioneering democratic reforms and criticized by others for impoverishing millions during his tenure in the 1990s, died April 23 of heart failure at the age of 76. His irreconcilable adversaries from the Communist Party refused to stand up during the minute silence that opened a parliament session Wednesday and did not turn up at the memorial service.

Wednesday's comments on the party's official website described Yeltsin as a "strong personality" but reasserted that the Communists "ought not to bow to the memory of an architect of the bandit perestroika and thieving privatization."

Yeltsin was born and raised in the Sverdlovsk Region in the Urals. After graduating as a construction engineer, he became a career Communist bureaucrat but later fell out with the old guard in the party and in 1991 led a movement against the Iron Curtain and the Soviet Union for Russia's independence. Reelected in 1996, he promoted Vladimir Putin and handed over presidential power to him three years later. Since his resignation, Yeltsin has stayed conspicuously out of politics.

The legislature and the city hall in the Sverdlovsk regional center of Yekaterinburg are about to launch a campaign to name one of the city's streets, parks, or squares after Yeltsin.

"The regional legislature has received numerous proposals from local citizens to commemorate Boris Nikolayevich's memory - proposals that I do not think we should ignore," regional legislature speaker Nikolai Voronin said.

Another proposal is to erect a monument to Yeltsin, who already has a memorial board on the house where he lived.

http://en.rian.ru/russia/20070425/64395414.html

december
26-04-2007, 04:49 PM
Tell me more. He seemed to be a probable mind control slave.

What makes you think that Boris Yeltsin was "a probable mind control slave"?