Photo: Maria Zakharova. source: wikipedia
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova reacted in her telegram channel to the news that Estonian Prime Minister Kaya Kallas called on Western leaders to stop calling Vladimir Putin to resolve the conflict in Ukraine. Callas stated that “he feels in the spotlight”, but there are “no results” from this.
Zakharova became interested in “who gives such good advice”. And I found out that “no autocratic sultan has such a hereditary career”.
“Kaya Kallas is the Prime Minister of Estonia, just like her dad Siim Kallas at the time,” Zakharova writes and lists further: “she is the chairman of the Reform Party, just like her dad Siim Kallas at the time,”she is an activist of European institutions.” like her father, who held the posts of Commissioner and Deputy Chairman of the European Commission from 2004 to 2009, as well as from 2010 to 2014.
Also, the father of the Prime Minister of Estonia “was a member of the CPSU for almost 20 years (his daughter has everything ahead of her), and then created the party”, which initiated the law, “according to which – despite mass protests of the population – the monument “Bronze Soldier” was dismantled in 2007.
The diplomat also pointed out that since 1998, suspicions of abuse of official position have been repeatedly raised against Siim Kallas, as well as complicity in large-scale embezzlement and providing false information during his work at the Bank of Estonia. For example, he was accused of missing $10 million from a North Estonian Commercial Bank in 1993.
“And now achtung!», – Zakharova prepares readers for new information: «The same Pope Siim Kallas, whose grandfather Eduard Alver was the head of the paramilitary nationalist formation Kaitseliyt ».
The diplomat explains that it was “Kaitseliit” in 1939-1940 that was the stronghold of pro-fascist sentiments in Estonia.
The asset of this formation, according to Zakharova, “saw in Hitler the liberator of Estonia.” Among its members, “anti-Soviet military propaganda and pro-German agitation were conducted with the main thesis “to throw the Red Army into the sea”.
In addition, many of the former members of this formation “joined the military fascist organization “Omakaitse” created during the German occupation of Estonia. This organization, as Zakharova writes, provided “services to the Nazi army”. Also, former members of the “Kaitseleit” were involved in the mass extermination of Jews in Estonia.