Photo courtesy of Google Images
In comments which appear calculated to enrage the Kremlin, and which will further inflame relations between London and Moscow, the multimillionaire claimed he was already bankrolling people close to the president who are conspiring to mount a palace coup.
"We need to use force to change this regime," he said. "It isn't possible to change this regime through democratic means. There can be no change without force, pressure." Asked if he was effectively fomenting a revolution, he said: "You are absolutely correct." I am plotting a new Russian revolution (Cont’d)
GUARDIAN AUDIO: Berezovsky on change in Russia
THE GUARDIAN: Berezovsky on his personal safety
BBC: Russia probes Berezovsky 'plot'
BBC VIDEO: Russia probes 'Putin plot'
NZZ: Beresovsky widerspricht sich selbst
LE FIGARO: Manifestation sous haute tension à Moscou
THE SUNDAY TELEGRAPH: Hundreds held in Moscow anti-Putin protests
Mark Alexander
2 comments:
He looks less trustworthy than Putin.
Why does England have to give safe havens to all the nutters and trouble makers of the World?
Do we need their cash that much Gordon?
Kick em out to face the consequences.
Rip up the human rights bullshit and get real.
We cant defend ourselves properly, let alone attract all the scumbags of the world.
How trustworthy are any of them at the top?
Why does England have to be a safe haven for the "nutters and troublemakers" of the world? Probably because the powers that be are intoxicated by the money many of these people can bring in to the country. For example, I recently watched a report on the BBC which boasted that London, because it had attracted so many foreign multi-millionaires and billionaires, was one of the three cities in the world with the most rich people, topping, if I remember, even New York. It went on to say that our government attracts these people to our nation by giving them tax breaks (as if they needed any!), allowing them not to pay tax on any income from abroad. (Why should they enjoy such privileges, whilst real British people do not?)
You are right about not being able to defend ourselves properly; and you are right, too, that the human rights nonsense should be ripped up to enable us to kick the troublemakers out. But a lot of that problem with human rights legislation comes from Europe, as I understand it. The EU complicates such problems no end.
Post a Comment