
Ten people deported from Russia
According to Irina Volk, the official representative of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia, decisions to revoke citizenship were made by the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the FSB concerning ten citizens of Central Asia who pose a threat to national security.
Among them are two residents of the Arkhangelsk region who "supported the ideology of their nation's superiority" and had been repeatedly held criminally and administratively liable for using violence against citizens of Russia.
According to the security service, they acted as a group and committed violent acts in Severodvinsk, as well as other crimes.
A resident of the Tyumen region was also stripped of citizenship for attempting to radicalize members of one of the Central Asian diasporas in the region and for inciting hatred on political, national, and religious grounds.
Russian citizenship was revoked for two residents of the Zabaykalsky Krai who evaded military registration, as well as for a citizen convicted in 2020 for organizing illegal migration, who, after serving his sentence, again attempted to illegally bring foreigners into the country.
Additionally, citizenship was revoked for a resident of Buryatia, previously convicted for participating in an international religious extremist organization banned in Russia.
“All the listed individuals have been deported from Russia,” the Public Relations Center reported.
Citizenship was also revoked for a person from the Kamchatka Krai convicted of financing terrorism, a woman from the Samara region involved in supporting a banned international terrorist organization, and a man who participated in inciting interethnic conflicts in his region.
Photo www