28.03.2024

Pro-Kremlin Media Airs Putin-Praising ‘Flashmob’ Performance

Employees of an online retail platform in Russia’s fourth-largest city of Yekaterinburg have expressed their support for President Vladimir Putin in a massive dance flashmob.

In the video, which was widely distributed by pro-Kremlin media channels, hundreds of Sima Land employees march and dance in military-style uniforms to patriotic Russian pop songs like “When They Beat Us, We Fly” and “Russia Go On!” While the employees are seen wearing face masks, they crowd closely together,

“When we are beaten up, we just rise higher and higher from the pain,” a song by Russian-Uzbek singer Nargiz Zakirova says while the crowd performs rehearsed dance moves.

“Putin is our president!” the crowd shouts at the end of the clip while giving a right-hand salute.

Some online observers compared shots of the crowd saluting Putin to footage from North Korean parades and likened the Sima Land office’s lavish interior to the “Putin’s Palace” estate targeted by jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Though many on social media believed the video to be part of the Kremlin’s response to viral TikTok clips in support of Navalny, Sima Land’s owner, businessman Andrei Simanovsky, denied links between the performance and the recent pro-Navalny protests.

“We simply wanted to express our support to the president,” Simanovsky told Yekaterinburg’s E1.ru news outlet.

However, some employees told E1.ru that they weren’t informed of the video’s pro-Putin message in advance.

Sima Land has previously drawn controversy for its corporate policy, which, among other things, requires all employees to sing Russia’s national anthem and partake in group physical exercise at the start of each workday.

North Caucasus Man Detained for Barbecue at WWII Eternal Flame

A local resident has been detained for cooking a barbecue over an eternal flame monument to fallen World War II soldiers in Russia’s North Caucasus republic of Dagestan, state media reported Friday.

Footage shared by the Baza Telegram channel showed the elderly man crouching over the flames with two slabs of meat attached to a skewer.

“No need for coal,” the unidentified man was heard explaining to eyewitnesses at the Grieving Mother monument in Derbent’s park of military glory.

Officials in the Dagestani city of Derbent announced that the man in the video has been detained to face administrative charges, according to the state-run TASS news agency.

The officials did not disclose the charges.

Russian authorities regularly respond to incidents involving civilians roasting food, filming TikTok dances in front of or simply extinguishing eternal flame monuments in Russian cities.

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