Difference between revisions of "File:Trud-zekov.jpg"

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[[Slavery|Slave]] labor of prisoners at the Russian jail
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<ref>
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http://www.imrussia.org/ru/society/571-russias-slave-labor
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Александр Подрабинек. Рабский труд в России. 10 октября 2013
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</ref>.
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[[Рабсство|рабский]] труц зеков в российской тюрьме
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<ref>
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http://www.imrussia.org/en/society/571-russias-slave-labor Alexander Podrabinek. Russia’s Slave Labor. 10 October 2013. According to Izvestia newspaper, the annual turnover of Vostok-Service companies profiting from prison labor is more than 18 billion rubles ($600 million). According to experts, these companies account for one-third of the entire workwear market in Russia. Vostok-Service has a few branches in Europe, more than two hundred clothing stores in Russia and abroad, and nine companies producing clothing and footwear. Vladimir Golovnev, former United Russia deputy in the State Duma and co-chairman of the “Business Russia” Association, is the Vostok-Service’s president and main shareholder. .. As an investigation conducted by opposition activist Alexei Navalny shows, Golovnev invests part of his profits in buying property in the United States. In 2003, his wife bought an apartment in Miami Beach, Florida, for $518,900 (18911 Collins Ave, North Miami Beach, Florida). Later, the Golovnevs bought two more apartments in Florida for a total of more than $2 million. One might be happy for their good fortune if not for the fact that their wealth is founded on the maltreatment of prisoners, who work for $1 a month and are subjected to cruel punishments for not fulfilling their daily quotas of work.// Do residents of sunny Florida not feel offended by having for a neighbor someone who is building his fortune on prison slave labor? Do not US immigration authorities believe that such people should be unwelcome in their country?
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</ref>.
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Original filename: http://www.imrussia.org/images/stories/Society/Slave_Labor/trud-zekov.jpg
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The honest use is assumed, the source should be attributed.
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==References==
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<references/>
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[[Category:Slavery]]
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[[Category:Russia]]

Latest revision as of 08:54, 1 December 2018

Slave labor of prisoners at the Russian jail [1].


рабский труц зеков в российской тюрьме [2].

Original filename: http://www.imrussia.org/images/stories/Society/Slave_Labor/trud-zekov.jpg

The honest use is assumed, the source should be attributed.

References

  1. http://www.imrussia.org/ru/society/571-russias-slave-labor Александр Подрабинек. Рабский труд в России. 10 октября 2013
  2. http://www.imrussia.org/en/society/571-russias-slave-labor Alexander Podrabinek. Russia’s Slave Labor. 10 October 2013. According to Izvestia newspaper, the annual turnover of Vostok-Service companies profiting from prison labor is more than 18 billion rubles ($600 million). According to experts, these companies account for one-third of the entire workwear market in Russia. Vostok-Service has a few branches in Europe, more than two hundred clothing stores in Russia and abroad, and nine companies producing clothing and footwear. Vladimir Golovnev, former United Russia deputy in the State Duma and co-chairman of the “Business Russia” Association, is the Vostok-Service’s president and main shareholder. .. As an investigation conducted by opposition activist Alexei Navalny shows, Golovnev invests part of his profits in buying property in the United States. In 2003, his wife bought an apartment in Miami Beach, Florida, for $518,900 (18911 Collins Ave, North Miami Beach, Florida). Later, the Golovnevs bought two more apartments in Florida for a total of more than $2 million. One might be happy for their good fortune if not for the fact that their wealth is founded on the maltreatment of prisoners, who work for $1 a month and are subjected to cruel punishments for not fulfilling their daily quotas of work.// Do residents of sunny Florida not feel offended by having for a neighbor someone who is building his fortune on prison slave labor? Do not US immigration authorities believe that such people should be unwelcome in their country?

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