The Purge

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  • Pelagonija
    Member
    • Mar 2017
    • 533

    The Purge

    The so called Macedonians are purging each other into extinction.





    Can't believe the bloke who pulled scarecrows hair got 4 years whilst KLA freedom fighting murderers drive around in tax funded mercs.

    Where's the amnesty for our Macedonian brothers who threw a few punches.?

    What a pussy race.. the sooner this fake state full of self hating idiots is shut down the better.. There are more deserving peoples that deserve a nation.. just ask the 30 million kurds..
  • Tomche Makedonche
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2011
    • 1123

    #2
    Police arrested former police chief Mitko Cavkov and several MPs from the former ruling VMRO DPMNE party over the April 27 violence in Macedonia's parliament, which injured some 100 people.


    Macedonia Arrests Ex-Police Chief, MPs for Parliament Unrest

    Police arrested former police chief Mitko Cavkov and several MPs from the former ruling VMRO DPMNE party over the April 27 violence in Macedonia's parliament, which injured some 100 people

    Police on Tuesday morning detained Cavkov, the former head of the uniformed police, and several VMRO DPMNE MPs over the storming of parliament in April.

    They are being charged by the Organised Crime Prosecution with serious crimes against the state.

    “After consideration and analysis of the gathered evidence, the public prosecution in charge of organised crime and corruption ordered an investigation into 36 people,” the prosecution said in a press statement.

    The prosecution said that they are suspected of “terrorist endangerment of the constitutional order and security, according to article 313 of the Criminal Law”.

    Those arrested are being taken to Skopje Criminal Court where a judge will decide whether they should be remanded in custody.

    Media reports suggest that at least 30 more people were detained on Tuesday morning, including MPs Krsto Mukoski, Zaklina Stefanovska and Ljuben Arnaudov, all from the right-wing former ruling VMRO DPMNE party.

    According to unconfirmed reports, among those detained are other participants and protest organizers who were involved in the storming of parliament in April, including the former head of the Macedonian Opera Igor Durlovski, actor Vlado Jovanovski, and the leader of a right-wing ‘patriotic’ organisation from the town of Veles, Goran Agelov, alias Kjoseto.

    Media reported that several of the 36 suspects are still at large as police continue their search. The Interior Ministry said it will announce more details about the arrests later on Tuesday.

    The attack on parliament began when VMRO DPMNE supporters stormed the building only minutes after the new majority in parliament had elected Talat Xaferi as its new speaker, paving the way for the election of the new Social Democrat-led government, which eventually took office in May.

    The violent mob injured some 100 people including ten MPs from the new majority. The Social Democrats’ leader, current Prime Minister Zoran Zaev, was among the injured.

    Cavkov, who was in charge of the police's command centre, was accused by the former provisional Interior Minister of being unreachable much of that night, when he should have sent police reinforcements.

    He has previously denied any responsibility for the incident.

    Some MPs, including Mukoski, were seen on parliament video security footage, opening the legislature’s main door and seemingly giving instructions to the mob where to go.
    “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

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    • Tomche Makedonche
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2011
      • 1123

      #3
      Former prime minister and VMRO DPMNE party chief Nikola Gruevski led a protest against the arrests of 36 people, including his own MPs, who are suspected of involvement in violence in parliament in April.


      Macedonia’s Former Ruling Party Protests Against MPs’ Arrests

      Former prime minister and VMRO DPMNE party chief Nikola Gruevski led a protest against the arrests of 36 people, including his own MPs, who are suspected of involvement in violence in parliament in April.

      Several hundred people led by Gruevski and other high-ranking VMRO DPMNE party members protested on Tuesday amid a heavy police presence in front of the Skopje Criminal Court, where the suspects who were arrested in the morning were taken before a judge.

      “We demand the immediate release of all who were detained as part of this classic political persecution,” Gruevski told a press conference before joining the protest, insisting that the arrests were a direct attack on his political party and on Macedonian statehood.

      “The state is at stake. This is no justice. The laws don’t apply any more. This is a captured state!” Gruevski shouted.

      Police on Tuesday morning arrested former uniformed police chief Mitko Cavkov along with several other former police employees for their alleged involvement in violence in parliament on April 27 which continued for two hours without a proper police response.

      Police also arrested VMRO DPMNE MPs Krsto Mukoski, Zaklina Stefanovska and Ljuben Arnaudov.

      The organisers of the protests that led to the parliament violence were also detained, including a member of the VMRO DPMNE’s presidency, Bogdan Ilievski, the former head of the Macedonian Opera, Igor Durlovski, actor Vlado Jovanovski, film director Boris Damovski and the leader of a right-wing ‘patriotic’ organisation from the town of Veles, Goran Agelov, alias Kjoseto.

      VMRO DPMNE MP and former war crimes convict Johan Tarculovski remains the only one of the 36 suspects who is still at large.

      Macedonia’s prosecution meanwhile demanded that the court remand all 36 suspects in custody, accusing them of “terroristic endangerment of the constitutional order and security, according to article 313 of the Criminal Law”.

      If found guilty, according to article 313, the suspects face jail sentences of a minimum ten years.

      Meanwhile parliamentary speaker Talat Xhafer said that a parliamentary commission stands ready to convene should the court demands that the MPs who were arrested have their immunity from prosecution removed.

      The court is expected to decide whether the suspects should stay in detention on Tuesday evening or on Wednesday.
      “There’s a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part, and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus and you’ve got to make it stop, and you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, to the people who own it, that unless you’re free, the machine will be prevented from working at all” - Mario Savio

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