While the rumours of Ramzan Kadyrov's death are exaggerated, reports he is not well are true.
— Clear Blue (@ClearBlueSee) July 2, 2023
In a recent video, his hand is bruised from the use of a lure to provide fluids and he wears a hospital tag on his finger.#Kadyrov #Putin #Russia #Ukraine pic.twitter.com/MVNG4hNICO
SIDE FOR DOING BAD STUFF TO HIM AND THIS IS HOW THEY OPERATED. CRIME COVERED WITH CRIME FROM OPPOSITE SIDE - LONG KNIVES FROM MULTIPLE SIDES IN WHICH UNITED NATIONS, HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL AND OTHERS BECAME INVOLVED NEXT TO CURRUPT GOVERNMENTS.
UK Orders Review of Bank Rules on Politicians After Farage Blast
Ministers legislated last month to reduce the due diligence burden on banks handling accounts of domestic “politically exposed persons,” compared to non-domestic, after criticism that the law was having unforeseen consequences. The issue returned to the fore last week when former Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage suggested his accounts were closed because of the rule.
“We are already looking into this issue and have a passed a law that requires the Financial Conduct Authority to review how banks treat politically exposed persons,” the Treasury said in a statement on Monday.
But Farage also alleged he was the victim of “serious political persecution” and “prejudice” due to his role campaigning for Brexit, according to a video he posted to social media. He was tapping into a political gripe that has gained ground in Britain since PayPal froze the account of a group founded by the right-wing commentator and journalist Toby Young last year.
It was after that case that the government issued a “call for evidence” to look at the effectiveness of current rules, and the issue continues to be awkward for the government. In Parliament on Monday, Security Minister Tom Tugendhat underscored the dilemma facing the government over Farage’s case.
“This sort of closure on political grounds — if that is indeed what has happened, and after all, we only have the allegation of it at this point — should be completely unacceptable,” Tugendhat told MPs.
That balancing act — not accepting Farage’s allegations in full but also realizing there are potential political gains from agreeing in principle — was repeated across government on Monday. Sunak’s spokesman, Max Blain, told reporters Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt is also “concerned” by the reports.
“It would be a serious concern if financial services were being denied to those exercising the right to lawful free speech,” the Treasury said in its statement.
The risk for the government is that Farage has given the cause considerable momentum in British right-wing politics, a constituency Sunak wants to keep onside. Reclaim Party leader Laurence Fox called for a “run on the banks” and said he would be withdrawing his money from Barclays Bank Plc.
Meanwhile Conservative MP Charles Walker said banks are being too heavy-handed in their use of anti-money laundering rules against MPs.
“The situation is getting progressively worse,” Walker said on the right-leaning GB News channel. “I know of backbench members of Parliament who’ve never held any ministerial office at all being refused mortgages or having their bank accounts closed purely because they are members of Parliament.”
Ministers legislated last month to reduce the due diligence burden on banks handling accounts of domestic “politically exposed persons,” compared to non-domestic, after criticism that the law was having unforeseen consequences. The issue returned to the fore last week when former Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage suggested his accounts were closed because of the rule.
“We are already looking into this issue and have a passed a law that requires the Financial Conduct Authority to review how banks treat politically exposed persons,” the Treasury said in a statement on Monday.
But Farage also alleged he was the victim of “serious political persecution” and “prejudice” due to his role campaigning for Brexit, according to a video he posted to social media. He was tapping into a political gripe that has gained ground in Britain since PayPal froze the account of a group founded by the right-wing commentator and journalist Toby Young last year.
It was after that case that the government issued a “call for evidence” to look at the effectiveness of current rules, and the issue continues to be awkward for the government. In Parliament on Monday, Security Minister Tom Tugendhat underscored the dilemma facing the government over Farage’s case.
“This sort of closure on political grounds — if that is indeed what has happened, and after all, we only have the allegation of it at this point — should be completely unacceptable,” Tugendhat told MPs.
That balancing act — not accepting Farage’s allegations in full but also realizing there are potential political gains from agreeing in principle — was repeated across government on Monday. Sunak’s spokesman, Max Blain, told reporters Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt is also “concerned” by the reports.
“It would be a serious concern if financial services were being denied to those exercising the right to lawful free speech,” the Treasury said in its statement.
The risk for the government is that Farage has given the cause considerable momentum in British right-wing politics, a constituency Sunak wants to keep onside. Reclaim Party leader Laurence Fox called for a “run on the banks” and said he would be withdrawing his money from Barclays Bank Plc.
Meanwhile Conservative MP Charles Walker said banks are being too heavy-handed in their use of anti-money laundering rules against MPs.
“The situation is getting progressively worse,” Walker said on the right-leaning GB News channel. “I know of backbench members of Parliament who’ve never held any ministerial office at all being refused mortgages or having their bank accounts closed purely because they are members of Parliament.”
HERE IS WHAT DESPERATE ROYAL BRITISH PRESS REPORTS TODAY
AS A HEADLINE - AND DESPERATE AS IT GETS.IT WAS PUBLISHHED ON 3RG WHICH IS YESTRDAY BUT KEEP LINE ATOP OF THEIR PAGE AS HEADLINE.
Putin puppet breaks silence on deathbed rumours in bizarre new video
Ramzan Kadyrov, the long-standing leader of Chechnya and ally of Vladimir Putin, has been rumoured for months to be suffering from a fatal kidney illness.
A close friend of Vladimir Putin has hit out at rumours that he is on his deathbed in a bizarre video in which he claims he “does not want to live long”. Ramzan Kadyrov, the head of Chechnya, a republic of the Russian Federation located next door to Georgia, was filmed alongside Russian MP Adam Delimkhanov joking about his health.
During the war in Ukraine, Putin promoted Kadyrov to colonel-general in the Russian national guard, giving the Chechen additional power. He already controls national guards with a strength of up to 30,000 and has plans for his own private army.
Ramzan Kadyrov, 46, is seen alongside friend and Russian MP Adam Delimkhanov in the clip, in which the pair vow to “continue to carry out the tasks” citizens want achieved.
Kadyrov has been rumoured to be suffering from “kidney failure”, while Delimkhanov himself was reported last month to have been killed or wounded in the war in Ukraine after being targeted by a missile strike.
In the video, Mr Delimkhanov says: “It is precisely for such small-minded people that we, together with our dear brother, the Head of the Chechen Republic, Hero of Russia Ramzan Akhmatovich Kadyrov have recorded a video clip. Well? What do you say now?”
“We are still alive somehow,” Kadyrov then adds. “Anyway, we don’t want to live long. We will live a short but decent life.”
Chechen opposition politician Tumso Abdurakhmanov said: “Information is coming in that Kadyrov is near death and no longer speaks.
“His kidneys have completely failed, and dialysis does not help. It is possible that these are his last days.”
Meanwhile, another report said the Chechen leader had flown to Mecca, adding that he has a “serious kidney disease”. Express.co.uk could not verify these claims.
In March, after being driven into the mountains of his fiefdom in the TransCaucasus, he posted: “For those who console themselves with the hope that I am terminally ill, I am sorry to upset you. I am healthy and full of energy.”
He admitted that “people claim I have different diseases - sometimes I [am presumed to] have problems with my kidneys, sometimes with my liver”.
Kadyrov has ruled Chechnya for 16 years and boasts he has been sanctioned by the West more than any other individual.
He is widely accused of human rights abuses.
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