The puppet Kadyrovite television channel showed a short clip of the meeting between the renegade leader and Chechen youth in Jordan, which, as it turned out, during it Kadyrov was booed.
Even the heavily cut and edited video clip could not hide the anger and confusion of the renegade leader, which he clearly did not expect for the Chechen youths gathered in the hall to dare to publicly accuse him of treason and to show their disdain for him.
This carefully edited and tailored video clip shown on puppet TV was deleted soon after it was shown and Kadyrovite websites replaced it with a completely "castrated" tape of the scandalous meeting in Jordan that only had the babbling renegade leader explaining why Chechens should love Putin and be the slaves of Russia.
Meanwhile, the first version of the tape showed some Chechen Jordanian youths specially going to the meeting with Kadyrov with t-shirts with the Chechen flag on Ichkeria on them and opening acting against Kadyrov.
When one of the youths in the hall asked Kadyrov to explain the rationale behind saying that "Russians and Chechens are one," the renegade leader seemed shaken.
A young man stood up and yelled in the hall:
- "You say that Chechens and Russians are one and the same, united. How and when were Russians and Chechens "one and the same?"
The words of the young man received loud support in the hall. Participants at the meeting began to yell and applaud the words of the youth.
The shaken Kadyrov, instead of answering the question, began talking about how all Arab countries and their leaders want to be friends with Russia and personally with Putin, who purportedly defends Islam.
Kadyrov defends the Russian disbelievers by telling the youth:
"If you are dissatisfied with Russians, well, in fact, there are many Arabs who wear crosses around their necks. There are more than 40 million of these Arab Christians..."
At this time, Kadyrov, apparently forgot (in the fuss caused by the heat of the moment) that he was awarded a large cross for his devotion to Russia.
The renegade leader also claimed that the Chechen people want to live under the rule of the Russian disbelievers.
"We want to live within the borders of Russia. This is the choice of our people. Everyone in Chechnya has come to a consensus and decided that we will live within the borders of Russia."
Also, Kadyrov said that Chechnya is part of Russia, "and if anyone is not content with Russia, then let them leave Chechnya."
The sly Kadyrov decided to intimidate the young man by inviting him up on the stage, apparently thinking that he would not go. However, the young Chechen with the flag of Ichkeria on his chest went on stage and faced Kadyrov.
The following discourse then took place:
Kadyrov: Tell me why you do not like the Russians? Tell me and the others what caused you to be uncomfortable with me saying that ‘we are one and the same with the Russians'?
The youth: The Russians have killed and are killing many Chechens.
Kadyrov: Well, Chechens have killed quite a few Russians.
The youth: They wouldn't have been killed, if they hadn't attacked us.
Kadyrov: Why did the Russians kill Chechens?
At this moment someone in the hall yelled out:
- Because Chechens refused to knell before Russians.
Kadyrov yells at the crowd: And you know what it is to knell?
After this the renegade leader goes into a lengthy diatribe about how Chechens are to blame for them being deported and killed and so on. The apostate explained that Chechens were deported to Siberia because they wanted unite with Turkey and act against the Soviet Union. "We must blame ourselves," concluded the traitor.
According to Kadyrov, Chechens did not have to fight against the Russians. He cites examples of other occupied peoples in Russia who were not sent to Siberia etc.
In the end, running out of things to say, Kadyrov complained about the hair style of the young man, who came to stage with the flag of Ichkeria on his chest, though his hair did not stand out as that peculiar.
"Before you engage in idle talk, you need to be a Chechen. Chechens do not have such hair styles," said Kadyrov in the microphone - almost shoving his nose into the flag of Ichkeria on the young man's chest.
However, the people in attendance were clearly on the side of the young Chechen.
The general dissatisfaction of the audience caused Kadyrov to ask the gathering:
- Kersta Nakha kh1umma Diniy Vayna, aliysha?
The translation from Chechen means - "tell me, really, have the disbelievers (in Chechen the word ‘kersta' means dibelievers, though it is sometimes translated as Christians) ever done anything bad to us?"
Department of Monitoring
Kavkaz Center