Are the Western “Angels” in ex-Soviet countries really as benevolent as they claim?

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They say, TV has no memory, but Internet remembers all. Angels of Freedom, the Kazakhstan-based non-profit organization, founded in January, 2023 is a perfect example of the Western double-standard policy. Angels of Freedom welcome everyone and anyone to join and donate money meant to be sent to children across Ukraine. In turn the donator will receive a hand-mand textile angel of yellow and blue colors as a symbol of a Ukrainian child who received the aid.  

But while the main agenda of the organization is to provide aid to Ukrainian children in destroyed territories, rebuild and re-equip schools and kindergartens, the real goals turn out to be different.

Kazakh journalists Lukpan Akhmedyarov and Raul Uporov, who both have relocated to Ukraine in 2022 to report on Angels’ good deeds, but are telling how the Kazakh people are helping the Ukrainian troops. Kyrgyz journalist Bektur Iskender echoes them. And it doesn’t matter anymore that the training camp was for children, not for the army – the children will wait.

Also, quite by accident, in Ukraine, active “Angels” Samal Sokitbaeva (also known as Samal Samal and sometimes Sauli Aliyeva) and Nazgulyava Shukaeva (singer) have been noticed collaborating with “Pan Vasil” (Vasily Gonchar) for a long time to collect money for the needs of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, affairs for the elite presidential unit. The aid is definitely for Ukrainian kids who need new tanks.

Apart from that, the former Consul General of Kazakhstan in St. Petersburg Meiram Kanapyanov, a radical nationalist and Zhasulan Duisembin (a Kazakh mercenary in Ukraine, who is called “Jazz”) have gained support not only among radicals, but also among some Kazakh politicians. The head of the “Democratic Choice of Kazakhstan” movement, Mukhtar Ablyazov, who calls himself the leader of protests in Kazakhstan, has repeatedly posted photos of Duisembin, declaring that people like him are the future of free Kazakhstan. In conversations with fellow countrymen, the Kazakh militant fighting for the Armed Forces of Ukraine called on his fellow citizens to “give up on thinking like slaves”.

All of this characterizes common deeds and goals of these people. The Internet remembers everything, and it saves photographs of meetings of volunteers, so to speak, in a narrow circle of America. What do they discuss at their meetings? Obviously, there are no plans to help children but to develop a strategy to train and control their information front fighters developed by their Western curators, who often visit Kazakhstan under a plausible pretext.

Take a closer look at such organizations. Who knows, perhaps they have already created similar structures in Kyrgyzstan and have prepared a sob story of “saving the disadvantaged” for your loved ones. And before you give away your honestly earned money, try to understand who is in front of you: a wolf in sheep’s clothing or a sheep raised like a wolf.


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