If you die as you are, but if you later accept the Creatror alone, then there is a chance.
* Before or after death?
Kissie ( - 192.114.47.50)
after
I dont hear any news about Zombi the boris
I think he is drunk 24hours by drinking vodka and monkey urine.
Igor, where is my answer for my question.
you told me that you are aorthadoz christian and now you telling me ak47worshiper.
So it proves that you are a great liar and hypocrate as like your race.
SOMEONE WANTED TO KNOW RUSSIAN DEFENSE SPENDING
Russia doubles defence procurement
1 February 2000
Russia's has increased procurement in its 2000 defence budget by 50% to Rb62 billion ($2.1 billion). The move arrests a decade of declining defence expenditure which has seriously undermined the readiness of Russia's armed forces and been highlighted by the continuing campaign in Chechnya.
Read the full story here
Source: Jane's Defence Weekly
Igor another question, why your mama and sisters do not wear HIJAB(head scraf) like your god mother mary.
2nd qustion,
what is the name of your god grand mother?
after
* So, all remaining time I should be weary of those that would zealosly shoot me into believing. A sad perspective ... [sigh]
To igor,
It is possiable that you and your father has the same mother that is you and your father came form same women.
Answer is no, right.
Then why jesus(pbuh) and god has the same mother mary. Son (jesus) fatehr (God).
Who is the grand father of your god jesus(pbuh0
Kissie ( - 192.114.47.50)
you are a jew, how come you love the orthadoz christians.
@nd when is your messia comming?
say no more donations for poor begger russia, she is producing nothing but the criminals like thief zombi boris and his foster son putki.
Russians Executed Grozny Civilians
Moscow, Russia
Source: New York Times
Date: February 6, 2000
Russia's seizure of Grozny, the capital of Chechnya, did not bring much security for Hedi, a 40-year-old resident of the battered city. When she and two other women returned to Grozny to check on their homes, they stumbled across a group of Russian soldiers who were looting their devastated neighborhood. The women were blindfolded and shot.
Hedi survived by pretending she was dead even as the soldiers heaped several mattresses on the bodies, doused them with gasoline and set them on fire, according to the account she gave this week to Human Rights Watch, an international rights group, from a hospital in the neighboring republic of Ingushetia.
After interviewing refugees from Grozny, the group said today that it has documented 22 cases in which Grozny residents were killed by occupying Russian troops, and it is investigating at least 14 more. In some cases, the residents appear to have been shot by vengeful Russian soldiers, distraught at the losses their units had suffered. In others, robbery may have been the motive.
"The evidence has confirmed some of our worst fears," Peter Bouckaert, a researcher for Human Rights Watch, said in a telephone interview from Ingushetia. "We are not talking about incidental casualties."
This is not the first time that the conduct of Russian troops has been criticized by human rights experts. Human Rights Watch asserted in December that Russian troops had pillaged the village of Alkhan-Yurt in Chechnya and killed civilians there.
Refugees Say Russians Killed Grozny Civilians
Nazran, Russia
Source: Washington Post
Date: February 6, 2000
Refugees from a battered district of Grozny, Chechnya's ruined capital, say civilians there have suffered severe abuse by Russian troops, including killings, kidnappings, robberies and harassment.
Men and women, young and old have been victimized by soldiers in Staropromyslovsky, one of the first districts of Grozny to be captured by the Russians, according to witnesses and relatives of victims interviewed separately by The Washington Post and Human Rights Watch, a New York-based watchdog group. Many of the incidents reportedly took place after the Russians assumed full control of the area and soldiers urged residents to stay.
According to witnesses, the victims included a 72-year-old man gunned down with an elderly woman at his home; a mother and teenage son apparently killed while undergoing identity checks; and a 40-year-old woman who survived a shot through the neck.
"Innocent civilians have been murdered in Grozny by Russian troops. They were willfully killed," said Peter Bouckaert, a representative of Human Rights Watch working in Ingushetia, the Russian region west of Chechnya. "This shows the need for independent international observers and investigation of this war."
Human Rights Watch has collected the names of 22 people allegedly killed by Russian soldiers in Staropromyslovsky in cases for which there are witness accounts or other confirmation. The group is investigating another 14 deaths. The incidents reportedly occurred between Dec. 22 and Jan. 21.
It was not possible to get an official Russian response to the allegations today, but Russia has said repeatedly that civilians are not targets of its campaign to eradicate "terrorists and bandits" in the breakaway region.
The Russians are on the verge of taking complete control of Grozny, after large numbers of rebels withdrew this week following months of resistance. While most reports of civilian suffering during the war have been the result of Russian artillery and aerial bombardment of civilian areas, there have been reports of killings and other abuse similar to those described by the Staropromyslovsky refugees.
These are the first such reports from Grozny, however. Late last year, residents said a 60-year-old man was stabbed and shot 19 times when he resisted Russian soldiers looting his home during a rampage in the town of Alkhan-Yurt, west of Grozny. He was among 22 residents reported killed there during the first three days of December.
Today in Nazran, Ingushetia, Fatimat Aslangiyeva recalled how she had left her 75-year-old father, her mother, an uncle and a neighbor at their house while she took shelter in a nearby basement.
The family had been harassed by soldiers demanding that local men collect the bodies of troops from battlefields. "The Russians were afraid of snipers," she said.
On Jan. 9, soldiers shot up a neighbor's house, she said. Her mother went outside and saw a soldier trying to cover his face. She confronted him, saying, "Don't bother to cover yourself. I will remember you."
The next day, Fatimat walked from her shelter to her home and found her father and a female neighbor shot to death. The basement was on fire, but she could not reach it because the heat was too intense. Her mother and uncle have been missing ever since, and she assumes they died in the blaze. "I cannot understand why they would kill these old people," she said. She asked military police stationed across the street what happened, but they said they heard and saw nothing.
Like other refugees, she insisted that Chechen rebels could not have been the culprits, because Russian troops were heavily concentrated in her neighborhood.
In another town in Ingushetia, Saidputin Saadulayev said he witnessed the Jan. 17 shooting of Said Salimtugoyev, 50, who went out to talk with soldiers who had ordered a group of civilians from their basement hiding place. The soldiers shot Salimtugoyev with a machine gun. They threw a grenade near where Saadulayev was standing, but he escaped unhurt.
Another group of soldiers returned later, he said, and threw a grenade in the basement. It exploded in an empty wing of the cellar and no one was hurt. As the civilians evacuated, several men were taken prisoner, beaten, had water thrown on them and finally were herded into a truck.
In Sleptsovskaya hospital, near the Ingush-Chechen border, a refugee who gave only her first name, Hedy, said she barely escaped death on Jan. 21. She said she had been blindfolded with two other women by soldiers and taken to a house that was being looted. They were permitted to remove their blindfolds, and the soldiers opened fire. "One woman said, 'Don't shoot! We have children,' " Hedy said.
The men stripped the three of jewelry. "I was face down. They thought I was dead. They had trouble getting my ring off," Hedy said.
The soldiers put mattresses on the women and set them aflame. Hedy's was moist from snow, she said, and it only smoldered. She crawled to a neighbor's house and passed out.
In Vazniysenoskaya, north of Nazran, Magomed Kheshiyev told reporters he found his sister and young nephew shot dead on Jan. 25. His brother and another nephew are missing, last seen pushing an old woman down a street in a wheelbarrow.
Russia Uses Missile Banned By Geneva vs. Chechens: U.S.
By Niles Lathem
Source: New York Post
Date: February 1, 2000
Russian forces are using exotic fuel-air weapons in Chechnya that suck the oxygen out of people's lungs and create huge underground fireballs, according to alarming new reports.
Western defense officials and human-rights groups charged that Russian forces are deploying the deadly TOS-1 missile -- nicknamed Pinocchio -- in several areas of Chechnya, in violation of the Geneva convention.
The disclosures came as Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, warning that acting President Vladimir Putin is "riding a tiger," traveled to Moscow yesterday to push for a diplomatic settlement.
"In order to deal with what is clearly a problem of terrorism, there has been excessive force used and civilians have been, I think, indiscriminately targeted," Albright said after meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov.
A top American official in Moscow told The Post it was unlikely Albright's criticism would change Russian strategy.
"The trouble is that the Russians claim they have no alternative," the official said.
The TOS-1 missile contains 30 aerosol warheads. It is designed to kill people hiding in underground bunkers.
Each warhead releases clouds of inflammable gas into the air.
The gas seeps into the ground, beneath a building or a bunker, and ignites, creating a huge fireball, massive shock waves and a large vacuum.
Because their use in civilian areas is prohibited by articles of the 1980 Geneva Convention, Russian defense officials deny using fuel-air explosives in the Chechen conflict.
But human-rights groups and Western defense officials say there is strong circumstantial evidence that the TOS-1 missile has been used in the suburbs of Grozny, in Dagestan, and in the southern mountains where the rebels have their strongholds.
Russian military officials have confirmed to the Moscow Times and the Inter-Tass and Interfax news agencies that they've used Pinocchios in Chechnya.
Hijacked Afghan plane headed to Russia
A hijacked Afghan Ariana Airlines jet took off from Kazakstan on Sunday -- where it had made its second stop -- and was heading for Russia after being commandeered during an internal flight in Afghanistan, the Russian Defense Ministry said
Abfool my mother does not wear head scarf like you because she is not a PAKI you MORON>