Dmitry Soin

Dmitry Yuryevich Soin (Russian: Дмитрий Юрьевич Соин; born 7 August 1969) is a Transnistrian sociologist and politician. He is the leader of the political party Proriv.

Biography

Dmitry Soin was born on 7 August 1969 in the city of Tiraspol, in the Moldavian SSR of the Soviet Union. He fought in the Transnistria War and afterwards served in the Armed Forces of Transnistria from 1993 to 2007, retiring with the rank of lieutenant colonel.

In 1994, Moldovan authorities brought criminal charges of murder against Soin, who killed a Tiraspol resident with a service weapon in a claimed act of self-defense. Soin was declared an internationally wanted suspect by Interpol in 2004.[1]

From 2008 to 2013, Soin was a media manager for the news agency Lenta PMR, until he moved to Ukraine after receiving a series of threats.[2]

From 2010 to 2015, Soin was a member of the Supreme Council of Transnistria, representing his party, Proriv. He was also director of the Che Guevara School of Political Leadership.

In 2014, Soin moved to Moscow, Russia. Since 2018, Soin has been a Russian nationalist activist, a leader of the Russian All-People's Union and an ex-leader of the Rodina political party led by Sergey Baburin.

gollark: > This policy supersedes any applicable federal, national, state, and local laws, regulations and ordinances, policies, international treaties, legal agreements, illegal agreements, or any other agreements, documents, policies or standards that would otherwise apply. If any provision of this policy is found by a court (or other entity) to be unenforceable, it nevertheless remains in force. This organization is not liable and this agreement shall not be construed. We are not responsible for any issue whatsoever at all arising from use of potatOS, potatOS services, anything at all, or otherwise.
gollark: https://osmarks.net/p3.html#4-4 overrides this, however.
gollark: The relevant parts of those are overridden by PotatOS privacy policy clause 4.2.γ, however.
gollark: That only works for certain HTTP headers, not all of them.
gollark: Oh, we had to disable that in most space-time because of people duplicating apioids.

References

  1. Maclean, R.; Danziger, N. (2014). Back in the USSR: Heroic Adventures in Transnistria. Random House. ISBN 9781783520633. Retrieved 2018-03-24.
  2. "2015 Nations in Transit Report on Moldova". Freedom House. Retrieved 2018-03-24.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.