Opinion » Columnists 
Wacko rag of the week?
26.03.2015   And now, ladies and gentlemen, prize for wacko rag of the week 
goes to Newsweek Magazine, more specifically its edition of March 27, whose 
central pages are dedicated to the piece called "Crimea One year on". The 
six-page piece by one Marc Bennetts includes references from Putin's "little 
green men" to references to "missing persons".Let us get the history straight. 
Last February an illegal Putsch orchestrated from Washington ousted the 
democratically elected President of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovich, without any of 
the legal precepts for an impeachment being present. Therefore, under the 
Constitution of the Republic of Crimea, with the maximum legal entity removed 
(the President), the body with powers to enforce the law was its Legislative 
Assembly, or Parliament. It was this body which organized the election in which 
a huge majority of Crimeans voted to return to Russia.   The Newsweek article 
says nothing of this. It starts with the opening paragraph complaining that 
Putin's "little green men" annexed Crimea, then the piece begins as such: 
"Vladimir Putin, steel in his eyes, strides purposefully through a field of 
corn". The article follows with paragraph headings, colored red, such as 
"Missing Persons", then  the two-liner in red capitals "There is an evil 
silence here. We are all in a prison camp. None of us is safe" and on the next 
page, also in red capitals, the ominous message "There is a double danger of 
Islamic extremism in Crimea".I say ominous, because watch this space and see if 
someone somewhere in the dark corridors of Washington does not remember to do 
to Crimea what someone somewhere did to Chechnya: start a Wahhabist movement 
among the Tartars to create problems.         There is nothing in this piece 
about the anti-Russian slogans chanted on the streets of Kiev after last 
February's Putsch "Death to Russians and Jews" and no details about the Fascist 
massacres of Russian speakers which took place in several locations in Eastern 
Ukraine, which forced the people of Lugansk and Donetsk to take up arms to 
defend themselves.There is nothing about the shelling of civilians by the 
Putsch forces loyal to Kiev or the battalions of Fascists sent to slaughter 
men, women and children, by Kiev.There is also nothing in the Newsweek article 
about the real story behind the scenes: after failing to get its war in Syria 
to grab Russia's Mediterranean Sea base, NATO decided instead to go closer to 
home, install a NATO-friendly government on Russia's frontier and then take 
over Russia's Black Sea bases, which are located where? In Crimea.So, Crimea is 
Russia and Russian, under the laws in existence when the West broke them. 
Instead of celebrating the enormous rise in pensions and the general standard 
of living of Crimeans since the Republic rejoined Russia, instead of 
concentrating on Russia's insistence that the Republic have three official 
languages and cultural protection programs for Tartars, Ukrainians and 
Russians, while Kiev was cutting Russian culture from its educational programs, 
Newsweek goes the same way as the rest of the bought or assimilated 
Press.Instead of focusing on the huge amount of humanitarian support given by 
Russia and Russians to civilians being murdered and tortured by Fascist forces 
supported by the West. Instead of stating that it is Kiev which does  not 
comply with paragraphs 8 and 11 of the Minsk Accords dated 5 September 2014, as 
well as paragraphs 7 and 8 of the full response to the Minsk Agreement of 12 
February 2015, Newsweek tries to shift the blame onto Russia.Instead of 
speaking to eye-witnesses on the ground in Ukraine, who deliver reports such as 
this: "Ukrainian army has shelled the settlements and positions of the DPR army 
16 times over the last 24 hours...16 truce violations have been registered over 
the past day. The attacks of Ukrainian army were mounted on Shirokino, Spartak, 
Tavricheskoye, Nikolayevka, Grigorovka, Staromaryevka, Gorlovka, Zhabunki, the 
DPR positions in the area of Peski, the "Oktyabrskaya" coal mine and the 
Donetsk airport", where does Newsweek stand? I will tell you:Another rag unfit 
to lie in a pile beside my toilet.Timothy 
Bancroft-HincheyPravda.Ru([email protected])*Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey 
has worked as a correspondent, journalist, deputy editor, editor, chief editor, 
director, project manager, executive director, partner and owner of printed and 
online daily, weekly, monthly and yearly publications, TV stations and media 
groups printed, aired and distributed in Angola, Brazil, Cape Verde, East 
Timor, Guinea-Bissau, Portugal, Mozambique and São Tomé and Principe Isles; the 
Russian Foreign Ministry publication Dialog and the Cuban Foreign Ministry 
Official Publications. He has spent the last two decades in humanitarian 
projects, connecting communities, working to document and catalog disappearing 
languages, cultures, traditions, working to network with the LGBT communities 
helping to set up shelters for abused or frightened victims and as Media 
Partner with UN Women, working to foster the UN Women project to fight against 
gender violence and to strive for an end to sexism, racism and homophobia. He 
is also a Media Partner of Humane Society International, fighting for animal 
rights.

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