On January 3, the cesspool of occupiers’ propaganda, “blogger” Alexander Talipov joyfully announced that the agressors’ punitive forces had detained the Dzhankoy businessman Vladimir Aslanov at the entrance to Crimea via the “Kerch Bridge” and that he had been “arrested by the court”, which was a continuation of the typical December story.
A video of Aslanov shooting a pistol into the air appeared on social networks, and in this fact, which is, to put it mildly, unremarkable in the current conditions, only one thing “excited” the Crimean collaborators: the local businessman spoke the Romani language.
Due to this “key circumstance”, the same Talipov and similar fraternity began to publicly demand that the “criminal authority” who dared to publicly speak Romani be punished. Aslanov himself almost immediately published a video, stating that he had fired a deactivated pistol on the occasion of a friend’s birthday, and that this had happened not in Crimea, but on the way to Karachay-Cherkessia.
Since the pathological hatred of the Crimean Nazis towards the Roma and their language was not fully shared by the Russian punitive forces in the Caucasus, no one touched Aslanov until his return to Crimea, and now the “especially dangerous terrorist”, whose only “guilt” was his “wrong” nationality and its public manifestation, was pathetically detained on the “Crimean Bridge”.
This manifestation of anti-Romanism from the aggressor’s punishers and their Crimean servants is not isolated; let us recall that in the recent Sevastopol “case of the associate professors”, Talipov’s “colleagues” from “ForPost” accused “rootless cosmopolitans” from the “Sevastopol University” of the fact that, according to their publications, the Romani language is widespread in Crimea, which, according to the criminal opinion of the Crimean Nazis, “should not be”.