ZDF: Putin deliberately sends Chechen migrants to Germany
The story looked like this:
Journalist Egmont Kokh printout of Chechen athlete Timur Dugazayev, who lives in Germany, to find out if he “has any connections with Russian special services.” By itself, the question looks, to put it mildly, strange. Dugazayev looked at Koch with bewilderment and declared that he did not understand what he was talking about. At the same time, Dugazayev did not find anything reprehensible in that representatives of the Chechen diaspora in Germany closely communicate with each other. So it is accepted practically in any diaspora of the same Germany.
The ZDF explained how the “Igor” turned out to be in Germany. The report claims that he "was bitten by the torments of conscience in connection with the actions of Russia," and he "decided to seek asylum in Germany."
The report of this channel caused mixed feelings among the Germans, in particular, in the German media. So, Die Welt published a material in which it says that ZDF, among others, made an attempt to prove that Russia is trying to influence Europe with the help of the migration crisis, but this did not work for the TV channel again - there is no evidence.
Surprisingly, the ZDF did not report anything about Putin’s “personal order” to send millions of refugees from Libya, Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria to Germany ... It seems that the authors of such projects, one of whom issued ZDF, live in a parallel reality and they notice the obvious: you can search for those guilty of the migration crisis for as long as you want, but for the beginning Germany still needs to look at itself - at its “insatiable” desire to carry “democracy” to the place where its Western version was not expected.
Recall that ZDF is the same channel that, for 20 thousand rubles, hired a Kaliningrader to participate in a film about a "Russian military mercenary fighting for the DPR." Russian journalists easily exposed this statement.
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