Russians Abroad: Blamed for a Regime They Sought to Escape

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
When Russian Andrei Kroo left his home in Ceske Budejovice last week, a city in the south of Czech Republic populated by a small Russian
understand it
outpouring of emotion by the international community, who have watched Ukrainains flee their home country in waves, with an estimated 1
one Russian-speaking Uzbek told The Moscow Times, after being likened to Putin by a shopkeeper in London who overheard her speaking
the country over 20 years ago
regime that they wanted to escape.Russian food stores in Germany and the Czech Republic reported cases of vandalism, classrooms in both
Australia and the U.K
have been forced to put in measures to safeguard Russian and Ukrainian students, and outside a cafe in Portugal a sign appeared with the
triggering a trend of shutting out Russian culture and art by European institutions in the West in an attempt to show solidarity with
sanctions to press Putin to end this awful war bleed into cultural sanctions with a high likelihood of stoking unnecessary anti-Russian
about the crackdown of Russian culture are divided