Support
for Tsarnaev brothers raises controversy
"This
is Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, a 19-year-old lad accused of a terrorist attack
in Boston. But as many people now know, that is a groundless
accusation, there is absolutely no evidence against him,” the
poster in Grozny stated.
Tsarnaev’s
mother Zubeidat Tsarnaeva has repeatedly insisted on her sons’
innocence, adding that they were framed.
As
the probe into the Boston Marathon bombing continues, leaflets
voicing support for the attack's surviving suspect have appeared in
the capital of Russia’s Republic of Chechnya, and in Kyrgyzstan,
where Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was born.
RT,
3
May, 2013
Several
petitions calling for the release of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev have collected
more than 5,000 signatures on the White House’s website, adding
more controversy to the case. A petition must collect 100,000
signatures in 30 days to be acknowledged by White House officials.
Judging by the dynamics of voting since the advent of the petition on
April 26, the bid looks to have a rather small chance of soliciting
an official response from the US president.
Posters
expressing support for Tsarnaev have appeared in Grozny, the capital
of Russia’s Republic of Chechnya, Interfax news agency reports.
Police
are currently looking for those who glued them on the walls of
underpasses in the center of the city.
"Now
he is in serious condition, in a prison hospital, he needs medical
and legal help. Dzhokhar's parents ask you for help, to collect money
for their son, whom they cannot lose, as they have already lost the
older son, cruelly, unjustly. We will be grateful for any help, in
the name of the Almighty do not remain indifferent,"
continued the poster.
The
information also includes a number for the Russian online payment
system, Qiwi Wallet, and the Tsarnaev family address on the
Russian social network VKontakte.
Leaflets
with a call to pray for the accused Tsarnaev brother also appeared in
Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan - the former Soviet republic where
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev was born.
"We
ask you not to remain indifferent, because the more people know the
truth, the greater the chance to get justice," the message
ran.
With
the legal process against the 19-year-old suspect commencing,
Tsarnaev has also received support from pages created on social
networks. A group on Facebook has attracted over 7,000 supporters who
believe he is innocent. A group on VKontakte named “For the
Tsarnaev brothers” has over 8,000 members.
In
the meantime, Dzhokhar told FBI interrogators that he and his brother
had planned suicide attacks for the Fourth of July, the United
States' Independence Day, before settling on April 15. Dzhokhar also
told investigators on April 21, only two days after being captured by
police, that the pair's plans were accelerated after they finished
building explosive devices at their Cambridge, Massachusetts
apartment faster than they had initially anticipated.
Dzhokhar
and his brother Tamerlan are alleged to have detonated two homemade
bombs near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on April 15,
killing three people and injuring more than 260. The main suspects in
the bombing are the Tsarnaev brothers. The elder Tamerlan was killed
on April 19 during a police operation to arrest him during which he
was run over by a car driven by his brother. Dzhokhar was arrested
shortly afterwards in a Boston suburb. He was seriously injured and
is now in a prison medical center outside Boston. The 19-year-old has
been formally charged with using a weapon of mass destruction.

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