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The note announced that two employees of the Embassy of the Russian Federation in Lithuania are becoming undesirable persons in Lithuania for activities incompatible with diplomatic status. The note tells them to leave Lithuania within seven days.
Lithuania made such a decision after the unprecedented events in the Czech Republic, in solidarity with the country and thereby expressing its full support for the Czech Republic for its actions in response to the 2014 bombing and the inadequate response from Russia.
The country’s Foreign Minister G. Landsbergis shared a message on Twitter on Friday.
The Russian embassy in Belarus responded by sharing the position of Landsberg and #SmallEnergy (Small penis energy).
It is true that this disrespectful record was removed from the official Twitter account of the Russian Embassy in Belarus on Saturday.
Many Internet users were surprised by the communication from the Russian Embassy in Belarus, which reached a “new level”.
Imagine that you work for Putin and this is how you write on Twitter. As if it was not related to his small penis, “wrote a netizen.
“This is how state recognition is sought now,” another netizen asked.
“The energy of the small penis is better than the lack of energy of the penis,” wrote another, sharing a photo of Vladimir Putin.
#Energy for deleting this pic.twitter.com/6225H3ImFP
– Hospital Raimis (@HospitaluRaimis) April 24, 2021
Together with # Latvia 🇱🇻 and #Estonia 🇪🇪 #Lithuania 🇱🇹 decided to show solidarity with #Czechia 🇨🇿 and expel two employees from the Embassy of #Russia 🇷🇺 for their activities incompatible with their diplomatic status. @JakubKulhanek
– Gabrielius Landsbergis (@GLandsbergis) April 23, 2021
It should be recalled that last week the Czech government announced, based on an intelligence report, that the Russian military intelligence agency GRU carried out two bomb attacks on its territory in 2014, one of which killed two people and caused significant material damage. .
As a result, the Czech Republic initially expelled 18 Russian diplomats, whom it considers secret agents, and announced on Thursday that another 63 employees of the Russian embassy will have to leave Prague to retain as many people as Czechs in the embassy in Moscow.
The country’s government has also asked for the solidarity of its partners to send part of the potential agents working in Russia’s missions from the capitals of the EU and NATO countries. Slovakia has already shown solidarity with the Czech Republic, which has decided to send three Russian diplomats.
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