In fact, the title of this article is not entirely accurate in form. And what about the content?
Judge for yourself
First, City Council member Mukhtarov didn't kill his opponent, Ryabkov, with whom he was suing over the building housing his Raduga store. But after Mukhtarov lost the case, Ryabkov was beaten with bats in the entryway of his building and died from the injuries in the hospital. The perpetrators were found and tried. They confessed that Mukhtarov ordered the beating of Ryabkov. He also confessed to ordering the beating of lawyer Stepantsov, who represented Ryabkov in court. The person who ordered the murder, from a legal perspective, is no less guilty than the perpetrator, and calling them a murderer is a minor mistake. True, Mukhtarov wasn't convicted at the time. They say the authorities got him off the hook—certainly not for nothing. They either cut in, or took a one-time cash payment. That was a long time ago.
But "secondly" happened on October 10, 2014. D. Mukhtarov became... secretary of the city council. And since we don't have a mayor now, he became the most important person in the city. And he was "appointed" by none other than GG (Governor General) Moskal.
It seems nonsense. The governor has no right to appoint, let alone interfere, in local government affairs. But our Governor did both, sending all the laws to hell. For starters, Moskal brought another Governor (General Guslavsky) to the session and seated him in front of him. Then he delivered a heartfelt speech. Like, some people's deputies tried to meet with teachers—well, we won't allow that.
What was meant was that at the end of September, Moskal threatened our head of the education department, saying he'd fire her if she allowed MP Ioffe to meet with teachers. Another violation of the law. A MP is supposed to meet with voters, report on his work, and no one has the right to interfere. And for Moskal, the law, it turns out, doesn't apply to... that very spot on the body of the girl with the oar. After all, the very next day, the second main character (Guslavsky) held a campaign meeting with those same teachers without hindrance. Moreover, he was guarded by the cops. Moskal explains his illegal bans by saying that "the Party of Regions held referendums here." But Ioffe isn't a Party of Regions member and had nothing to do with the May vote. A mystery. Rexbus. Crocsword.
Today, before the session, they say, the first GG, together with DD (D. Denishchenko, a man from the ATO with an unclear legal status), harassed and intimidated each deputy individually. They said, "Vote for Mukhtarov, or else it will be worse." It worked. Mukhtarov got 22 votes.
The question arises: why do these GG and DD, that is, the current authorities, need such an odious secretary of the Rubezhany City Council? I think the answer is simple: they have him on their hook, like a greenhorn. He's not only guilty of murder, after all. As recently as November 2010, he, likely intoxicated, crashed his car into four others near the Lastochka store. Clearly, he mangled them and injured people. And then he got away with it again: he quickly obtained a certificate stating he had epilepsy. And, apparently, he deposited some money where it belonged. For the authorities, such a "client" is just what they need: they can control him like a scooter.
Well, it's also good for the epileptic himself. His criminal adventures left his business in serious trouble, so he's eager to improve it by tapping the city treasury. This method is reliable—tested by Khomenka and Chernovetsky.
This begs a number of questions. Guys, are we running a militarized dictatorship? Why is one general, disregarding the law and utterly disregarding it, pushing another general into parliament by any means necessary? Isn't it to strengthen a new criminal organization dedicated to siphoning off funds (including from the city budget)? Isn't this why the de facto mayor peristally (scientifically, like shit from the rectum) pushes his puppet through without voting rights? And wasn't it Guslavsky, as police chief, who covered for an epileptic businessman in cases involving murder and a car accident?
Why do both main characters (the Gauleiter General and General Gu) behave so stupidly, straightforwardly, and fussily? Is it because they're both guilty of something on one side and a dirty backside on the other?
There's just so much of this crap popping up in our city, and it's so sudden. It's almost like we need to call a septic tanker...
Anton Kurdov, uainfo.org
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