NewsElderly man beaten in Moscow after remarks about Wagner Group

Elderly man beaten in Moscow after remarks about Wagner Group

The media circulated a recording showing two bus passengers in Moscow attacking an elderly man and forcibly dragging him onto the street. This occurred because, according to the attackers, the 87-year-old had called Wagner Group mercenaries killers. The elderly man was beaten, but the perpetrators were quickly arrested and charged with hooliganism.

Men attacked the pensioner and dragged him out of the bus.
Men attacked the pensioner and dragged him out of the bus.
Images source: © Youtube

9 Aug 2024 | updated: 10 August 2024 15:20

RIA Novosti reported that in Moscow, criminal proceedings were initiated for hooliganism against two men who attacked the 87-year-old retiree, Dmitry Grinchy, on the bus on August 9. No details were provided about the detainees. However, it is known that the 87-year-old has already been questioned as a victim.

In the recording that surfaced online, the two men started insulting the retiree, calling him a "fascist" after the bus passed the monument of the Wagner PMC mercenaries. The attackers believed they heard the elderly man call the Wagnerites murderers.

They forcibly pushed him out of the bus, twisting his hands, and handed him over to an on-duty traffic police officer. In the recording, one of the men is seen hitting the 87-year-old in the chest. One of the bus passengers tried to intervene but was unsuccessful.

In the end, the police arrested both the attackers and the retiree. At the police station, the men who started the fight filed a complaint against him. However, the 87-year-old was eventually released without a report being filed.

The retiree recounted to his lawyer, Oskar Cherdzyov, that he "was calmly riding the bus to the clinic when two individuals, father and son, started hitting him with their fists." The 87-year-old maintains that he did not insult anyone and was only mentioning how in 1937 his relatives were shot.

The retiree's father, Pavel Grinchy, worked as head of the planning department of the Civil Air Fleet. During a business trip to Khabarovsk, he was arrested, accused of espionage for Japan, and executed in 1938. After the father's arrest, Dmitry Grinchy remained in Moscow with his mother, hiding from potential arrest.

Dmitry himself only learned his real name when he was 15. He later found out that his father had been declared a "public enemy." He recounted his memories as part of the "My Gulag" project, carried out by the Gulag History Museum.

The 87-year-old does not understand why he was attacked. He filed a complaint against the attackers, claiming he was injured due to hooligan motives. As he says, his back hurts after the attack. His lawyer advised him to undergo medical examinations and a thorough medical evaluation.

I simply regret having to be born in a country where people are not considered people. Decent people, - the retiree sadly told journalist Ilia Azar from "Novaya Gazeta".
© Daily Wrap
·

Downloading, reproduction, storage, or any other use of content available on this website—regardless of its nature and form of expression (in particular, but not limited to verbal, verbal-musical, musical, audiovisual, audio, textual, graphic, and the data and information contained therein, databases and the data contained therein) and its form (e.g., literary, journalistic, scientific, cartographic, computer programs, visual arts, photographic)—requires prior and explicit consent from Wirtualna Polska Media Spółka Akcyjna, headquartered in Warsaw, the owner of this website, regardless of the method of exploration and the technique used (manual or automated, including the use of machine learning or artificial intelligence programs). The above restriction does not apply solely to facilitate their search by internet search engines and uses within contractual relations or permitted use as specified by applicable law.Detailed information regarding this notice can be found  here.