Post by Aglrinia on Jan 14, 2019 0:19:21 GMT
Radio Free Aglrinia
News about Refugees and Displaced People from the Aglrinian Caliphate, including commentary
News about Refugees and Displaced People from the Aglrinian Caliphate, including commentary
Ladies and Gentlemen it brings me no pleasure to start this Radio program with my colleagues, that I wish I met through different circumstances. The events of which you will hear through this program are true, we feel it is our personal responsibility to make sure that every single person on Auratus knows of the atrocities being committed by Kudu's tyrannical regime. That being said, some of the things that will be said in this radio program may be considered graphic, and we encourage our older listeners to think twice before allowing their children to listen to the material we broadcast to you.
Let's get started shall we;
For almost a generation Mauta Kudu remains a reality, as well as a symbol of the tyranny in the eastern hemisphere. Not only are the movements of once free people controlled, but contact with the outside world is strictly limited. Books, newspapers, magazines cannot be brought freely into the Aglrinian caliphate or its annexed territories. However, these are by no means the worst of the atrocities within the Shizhu Caliphate. Mauta Kudu relies strongly on a cult of personality to maintain his grip of power upon the nation. Those who fail to conform to the defined government ideals, and ethics are sent off to re-education camps otherwise known as Anyar camps. This didn't last very long, they're still doing this on a smaller scale; however, the government most notably the orchestrator of the movement a General Mirin has deemed it too costly to re-educate the citizens. Therefore, the majority of the camps have been converted into work camps to extract natural resources, once a person is deemed 'Haifai' or unfit, they're executed.
I have two testimonies from my colleagues here that I will read to you now;
"Pyunze was very frightening in a certain extent, because it was full of Aglrinians. Because until then we didn't see a lot of Aglrinians in the camps, only occasionally. It was full of Aglrinian soldiers and there were these barbed wires, with electricity in it you know. Discipline, very strict discipline. Of course we soon realized that there was this big smokestack, you know, out of which came a lot of smoke, and the sky was red, the sky was red all the time. And you know, when we asked what it is they told us, and we couldn't believe it. Well the Aglrinians didn't tell us, but other prisoners told us you know. 'What's this, what's this smoke, what's this fire, you know, why is the sky so red?' What is this all about, you know, we couldn't understand. But then we were told, very soon we were told you know, and we saw these transports of people coming; they came past us because there was this street, you know, this road that was going to the gas chamber, from the convoy, and they came past. All these transports came past us, you know, thousands and thousands of people. And they never appeared again, they just disappeared into this building. It was a very weird place, very weird place. With this atmosphere of death all the time you know, and this unbelievable situation of people being… you could smell, you could smell these people being burnt. All the time you smelt this…"
"Rumasi was not a work camp or a re-education camp, this camp was only for ex-government officials. Whether you were a janitor at a government office, or a general when you sign up for a government job you accept the risk of one day ending up here, because you looked at your superior in a wrong way, said something out of tone, anything. Everyone is spying on everyone, out of fear for themselves. They had one thought in mind when they were taking people to Rumasi, and that thought was torture. The first thing you see upon entering the camp is a large Banyan tree, there are four speakers attached to the top of each side of the Banyan tree. They would broadcast the screams of the victims over those speakers. They would torture people accusing them of conducting espionage for the KGBI, and ONI until we would believe Kudu's lies and actually think we were foreign operatives. Sadly they're not afraid to experiment with their torture methods, I myself suffered from oxygen deprivation, tooth extraction, water cure, sleep deprivation, jellyfish kuogelea, sensory deprivation, and forced castration in the year that I was there. They thought I had died in my sleep, and left me with the corpses outside the camp. I don't know how one could get much sleep when they tied us up into stress positions at night. I still hear the screams..."
Let's get started shall we;
For almost a generation Mauta Kudu remains a reality, as well as a symbol of the tyranny in the eastern hemisphere. Not only are the movements of once free people controlled, but contact with the outside world is strictly limited. Books, newspapers, magazines cannot be brought freely into the Aglrinian caliphate or its annexed territories. However, these are by no means the worst of the atrocities within the Shizhu Caliphate. Mauta Kudu relies strongly on a cult of personality to maintain his grip of power upon the nation. Those who fail to conform to the defined government ideals, and ethics are sent off to re-education camps otherwise known as Anyar camps. This didn't last very long, they're still doing this on a smaller scale; however, the government most notably the orchestrator of the movement a General Mirin has deemed it too costly to re-educate the citizens. Therefore, the majority of the camps have been converted into work camps to extract natural resources, once a person is deemed 'Haifai' or unfit, they're executed.
I have two testimonies from my colleagues here that I will read to you now;
"Pyunze was very frightening in a certain extent, because it was full of Aglrinians. Because until then we didn't see a lot of Aglrinians in the camps, only occasionally. It was full of Aglrinian soldiers and there were these barbed wires, with electricity in it you know. Discipline, very strict discipline. Of course we soon realized that there was this big smokestack, you know, out of which came a lot of smoke, and the sky was red, the sky was red all the time. And you know, when we asked what it is they told us, and we couldn't believe it. Well the Aglrinians didn't tell us, but other prisoners told us you know. 'What's this, what's this smoke, what's this fire, you know, why is the sky so red?' What is this all about, you know, we couldn't understand. But then we were told, very soon we were told you know, and we saw these transports of people coming; they came past us because there was this street, you know, this road that was going to the gas chamber, from the convoy, and they came past. All these transports came past us, you know, thousands and thousands of people. And they never appeared again, they just disappeared into this building. It was a very weird place, very weird place. With this atmosphere of death all the time you know, and this unbelievable situation of people being… you could smell, you could smell these people being burnt. All the time you smelt this…"
"Rumasi was not a work camp or a re-education camp, this camp was only for ex-government officials. Whether you were a janitor at a government office, or a general when you sign up for a government job you accept the risk of one day ending up here, because you looked at your superior in a wrong way, said something out of tone, anything. Everyone is spying on everyone, out of fear for themselves. They had one thought in mind when they were taking people to Rumasi, and that thought was torture. The first thing you see upon entering the camp is a large Banyan tree, there are four speakers attached to the top of each side of the Banyan tree. They would broadcast the screams of the victims over those speakers. They would torture people accusing them of conducting espionage for the KGBI, and ONI until we would believe Kudu's lies and actually think we were foreign operatives. Sadly they're not afraid to experiment with their torture methods, I myself suffered from oxygen deprivation, tooth extraction, water cure, sleep deprivation, jellyfish kuogelea, sensory deprivation, and forced castration in the year that I was there. They thought I had died in my sleep, and left me with the corpses outside the camp. I don't know how one could get much sleep when they tied us up into stress positions at night. I still hear the screams..."