Daily Slave
September 7, 2014
These Pussy Riot whores just won’t go away. This alleged Russian activist rock group or whatever you want to call them are now launching their own propaganda service to cover stories that they say Russian media outlets are forbidden to cover. They gained a great deal of attention when some of their most high profile members were imprisoned for hooliganism after performing a strange protest at a Moscow church.
Some of their members have also gained attention for performing a sex act with a frozen chicken and participating in group sex orgies in public. They are uber-edgy.
These chicks have received a ridiculous amount of attention from Jew run media outlets in the West. Considering that and their consistently lewd behavior, it would not be a surprise if they were really working for a Western intelligence operation of some kind.
Nothing these disturbed young women do should be taken seriously including this new propaganda service they are launching.
Feminist rockers Pussy Riot are set to launch their own, independent news service to tackle controversial topics Russian media outlets are banned from covering.
Reporters at Mediazona will work in conjunction with a prisoner’s rights organisation set up by two members of the group, Nadezhda Tolokonnikova andMaria Alekhina, to focus on the country’s tough justice system.
The singers hit headlines in 2012 when they were imprisoned on hooliganism charges after performing a protest song against President Vladimir Putin in a Moscow church.
“Since our release from prison … we’ve felt that Russian media are no longer able to cover what is going on,” Tolokonnikova says. “Because of the heavy censorship by authorities there is no space for anything in the media that criticises Putin’s policies and tracks human rights abuses by Russian courts and law enforcement.
“Courts, prisons, arrests, convictions, riots in facilities, political criminal cases, crimes by law enforcement officials — our new media outlet will try to cover it all.” Tolokonnikova and Alekhina have become outspoken human rights advocates since walking free from prison in December last year as part of a political amnesty.
They are currently suing Russian government officials in the European Court of Human Rights to demand compensation over their imprisonment.