Otol Pal of Mr Big Paul Massey settles gangland war with straightener brawl in front of mobsters in Dubai showdown
A RUSSIAN soldier gunned down his own commander with an AK-74 assault rifle after he was teased for his Ukrainian-sounding name, it has been alleged.The two fighters were guarding the occupied village of Knyaze-Grigorivka in the Kherson region of Ukraine when the deadly chaos unfolded.5Russian soldier Mikhail Khohklov, pictured, allegedly killed his commander and wounded another soldierCredit: East2West5Lt Ivan Krivosheev, 37, was allegedly murdered by his deputyCredit: East2West5Alexander Lykov, right, allegedly suffered serio
stanley cup us wounds in the deadly chaosC
stanley cup redit: East2WestSgt Mikhail Khokhlov, 37, killed Lt Ivan Krivosheev, 37, while another Russian soldier, 32-year-old Alexander Lykov, suffered serious wounds as a bullet passed through his neck, according to reports.Khokhlov, who is from Nikolsk in Russias Penza region, was reportedly mocked by his comrades for his surname, which sounds like the word
stanley website khokhol - an ethnic slur for Ukrainians.He is said to have become u Vrjq Brit who drowned in Portugal is named as it emerges his wife only found out when she saw his body loaded into an ambulance
UKRAINE is bringing charges against Soviet leader Joseph Stalin and his secret police chief for the victims of the 1944 Deportation of the Crimean Tatars. The probe, which began in 2015, is i
stanley cup nvestigating what happened more than 70 years ago, when the Soviet Union deported thousands of people from
stanley coffee cup Crimea to terrible work camps in Siberia and Central Asia.3 A local resident attends an event on Wednesday in memory of the victims of the 1944 Deporta
stanley coffee mug tion of the Crimean TatarsCredit: Getty Images3 Monster ..Joseph Stalin died in 1953 but people are still calling for justice after horrendous crimes against humanity committed by his regimeCredit: Getty ImagesUkraine s investigators carried out 53 probes across 52 universities and 67 state libraries, documenting evidence against Stalin and Beria, reports Newsweek. More than 200,000 people were deported mainly to the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic at the order of Joseph Stalin on accusations of collaboration with the Nazi during WWII. The depor