Russian occupiers in temporarily occupied Crimea are forming lists of “unreliable persons.” To do this, the racists are expanding the staff of the “Center for Countering Extremism of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for the Republic of Crimea” (“Center E”), including by attracting civilian secret police.
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This was reported today, November 26, on the website of the Center for National Resistance.
This center carries out:
monitoring of information resources (social networks, telegram channels, blogs, forums, sites with commenting capabilities). The main task is to identify “unreliable persons” and enter them into the specialized database “AIS extremist”. It is noted that the basis for inclusion in such a database may be comments or even reactions under messages criticizing Russian aggression or expressing a pro-Ukrainian position;
in cooperation with Roskomnadzor, it is engaged in blocking information resources on which information unfavorable to the Kremlin is published;
Center employees conduct special checks of candidates for positions in occupation administrations, as well as at critical infrastructure facilities.
“It is well known that the occupiers have already entered data on about 7 thousand people into their database. In particular, more than a thousand are representatives of the indigenous Crimean Tatar people,” the CNS notes.
Therefore, the CNS urges citizens to take care of their anonymity on the Internet.
“We remind you that you must use the Telegram messenger with maximum confidentiality settings. Do not use a number associated with your social networks and personal accounts, hide your personal number, use a nickname that is not repeated in other social networks, do not use personal photos,” the CNS notes.
The CNS is also encouraged to provide personal data of employees of this center or persons collaborating with them in the appropriate Telegram bot.
Source: Racurs

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.