Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label freedom. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Neringa Venckiene: The Lithuanian Aung San Suu Kyi

In my mind and probably in the minds of many others Neringa Venckiene's story has become strongly connected to the fight for democracy of Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma. Locking up Neringa Venckiene in jail as the government plans to do (just like the military junta did with the leader of the opposition Aung San Suu) would only reinforce her image as a martyr and a fighter for freedom and justice. It would make her party stronger and would bring the fall of those who try to break her. But in the coordinated and targeted attack on an innocent woman (and all honest people who tried to protect the child) fighting for justice, the Lithuanian government has revealed itself as a dictatorship.



Aung San Suu Kyi lived a comfortable life in the West (Oxford and then New York working for the UN), but when she returned to Burma in 1988 to care for her ailing mother, she realized that her home country Burma had turned into an oppressive dictatorship which crushed the lives of ordinary people. She realised it was impossible to live in such conditions and led the movement for democracy. As a result, the new junta which came to power after the ruling dictator General Ne Win stepped down, put her under house arrest for 15 of the past 21 years. In those years she saw her husband only 5 times, and few times her sons. But democracy cannot be oppressed. Aung San Suu Kyi prevailed and now she is in parliament leading the opposition and pressing for freedom and justice. This gentle and honest woman has become a symbol for those who will never give up the fight.

In another country in Northern Europe, Lithuania, another woman began a struggle for justice and freedom: Neringa Venckiene. Her struggle also began with an experience within her family, which profoundly changed her perception of Lithuania: her little niece was raped by powerful pedophiles, her brother murdered for trying to get justice and punish the pedophiles - and she herself has become an enemy of the state of Lithuania, attacked with its full force. Now, parliament is removing her immunity to put her, the innocent fighter for justice and democracy - in jail, why not for an indefinite period of time? Again, the parallels between Neringa Venckiene and Aung San Suu Kyi are strong.  Both women fight for democracy against overwhelming enemy, and both women have decided to never stop fighting until justice is done, and people are freed.

And by attacking Neringa Venckiene with the full force of the Lithuanian state, just like the military junta in Burma attacked Aung San Suu Kyi, the Lithuanian government has revealed itself as a dictatorship: 

The Lithuanian government has brutally suppressed the freedom of speech (all main media are controlled), violently crushing the protesters for justice and truth with police and special forces (see videos on this blog). The government of Lithuania has used police and special forces even against innocent children and old people (see other postings and videos in this blog) to crush the new movement led by Neringa Venckiene, the party for Courage. The government, parliament and judiciary cover up the crimes, protect pedophiles and encourage violence against innocent people, because they know that their time has come. They have to go. The desire for justice and freedom in the Lithuanian people cannot be stopped. They cannot be scared. They have nothing left to loose.

Locking up Neringa Venckiene in jail would only reinforce her image as a martyr and a fighter for freedom. It would make her party stronger and would bring the fall of those who try to break her. 

Friday, June 8, 2012

Deimante's Abuse: How can Lithuanian government get away with this?

This is a video summary of the traumatic events around the abduction of Deimante, a 8 year old girl sold by her own mother to a powerful paedophile clan in Lithuania.

The president Dalia Grybauskaite did NOTHING to save this girl from the pedophiles in her government administration and in the VSD. Look at her tired face and stiff expression as she reads the text behind the camera: Does she look like someone who truly care for her country? She is just a robot and scared for her re-election next year. She does not dare oppose the degenerates in her own party, nor to fight corruption.
All she does is protecting the criminals and ask for their support. Is this the kind of person you want as a head of state??

Listen to the girl's screams! She knows her life and her future are taken away from her. She is fighting for her life. She screams that she does not want to go and asks the perpetrators to leave her home.

 But they prevailed - with 250 strong police and Special Forces they abducted her. We do not know where she is. What we know is that the little happy girl, who wanted to stay "forever" with her aunt Neringa, because "she is god to me" is now kept in complete isolation, guarded by armed guards 24/7, receives no education, has no friends, nothing. Her father Drasuis Kedys was murdered for trying to defend her from the pedophiles who raped her, and her aunt Neringa Venckiene is going to jail for trying to protect the little girl from her abusers. Yet the mother, Laima Stankunaite, who sold her little girl to perverts and degenerates for 4 000 Euro/month, and who often joined them in bed is free and living under government protection.

None has seen Deimante since they abducted her, but we can imagine that she is in a very bad mental state, suffering from isolation, lack of stimulation, is probably drugged and abused. She lives in prison-like conditions and her abusers are out there - free and powerful.

How can Lithuanian government get away with this?

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Lithuanian police arrests 6 children for drawing the word "truth"


Police arrests 6 children for drawing the word "truth" with chalk.
Is this Belarus? No, its Lithuania of the EU. Can someone please tell that to the right guys in
Brussels?
The policemen must have felt very proud of themselves. Do you know their names?
We want to publish them. They need international recognition.
They will probably say the children beat them.