Brutal gay video
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Have you even heard about them?” he questioned.
“No,” the officers mumbled in response. “Was there a single case when I ordered you to torture someone here illegally and to arrest someone and bring them here?” “No,” they replied in unison.
Amnesty International’s Russia researcher Heather McGill responded to Kataev’s comments, telling VICE News, “The interview with Ayub Kataev clearly shows the extent of homophobia in Chechnya… It’s imperative that those at risk in Chechnya are able to access effective asylum procedures in other countries.
The way Airon plays with his strength, savoring every second of control, is hypnotic.
Just when you think you’ve seen it all, Airon raises his fan high above his head in a stunning display of dominance, holding him like a feather while his muscles ripple and veins pulse with power. Both are pioneering ventures in the competitive realms of adult video distribution and online media, respectively.
The sheer effortless nature with which he overpowers and controls makes it clear - Airon doesn’t just flex for admiration, he flexes to dominate.
The video begins with Airon applying bone-crushing holds, his bulging biceps and thick chest pressing tightly as he effortlessly dominates his helpless admirer. He was raised in Moscow and attended college there, graduating with a degree in law.
In this jaw-dropping display of strength and control, Airon puts his smaller victim through a series of crushing holds that showcase his raw, unrelenting power. Imagine if I detained someone here illegally.”
The warden’s denials are no surprise, since even the state’s highest authorities have shown no inclination to investigate claims of abuse.
On November 12, 2004, Michael Lucas was proudly sworn in as an American citizen.
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The entire performance is breathtaking - each move calculated, each flex designed to remind you who’s in charge.This isn’t just a muscle video - it’s an experience. But that’s just the warm-up. Human Rights Watch has confirmed that this site is at the center of their investigation into homophobic abuse in Chechnya.
The center is now abandoned and falling into disrepair.
Additionally, basing his company in New York City, as opposed to the more traditional Los Angeles, enabled Lucas to showcase the diversity of types and ethnicities found nowhere else.
This segment originally aired June 19, 2017, on VICE News Tonight on HBO.
In Chechnya, where homophobia is widespread and encouraged, gay men face a host of brutal punishments and persecution.
How can they prove that without a witness?”
VICE News showed the footage of Kataev to a man who said he was held and beaten at Argun center. Kataev suggested that the men making claims of torture were doing so in order “to get asylum, to leave the country and obtain free foreign citizenship.”
Kataev added: “Can they show me one person that I did that [to]?
In 2006, filming began on his most buzzed about film ever, Michael Lucas' La Dolce Vita. So far only a handful of countries have offered asylum to gay men fleeing human rights violations in Chechnya.”
Crushed and Manhandled By A Bodybuilder with Airon
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Airon is a force of nature - a true powerhouse who dominates with the ease of a god among men.
He recognized both the prison buildings and Ayub Kataev. Following an attempt by activists to hold a pride parade in the Northern Caucuses in April, at least 100 gay men were rounded up and arrested. Hundreds of footprints covered the corridor floors, despite repeated denials that the buildings had been in recent use.
Ayub Kataev, prison warden and head of the ministry of internal affairs, initially stuck to the official Chechen response: absolute denial, not only about abuse but even the existence of gay people.
The man asked to remain anonymous to protect his safety. “Let them prove that they were here. “We don’t think these people exist among us,” he told VICE News, accusing those who reported the story of seeking to destabilize Chechnya.
“My officers would not even want to touch such people, if they exist, let alone beating or torturing them.” Kataev continued, accusing both the victims and Human Rights Watch of lying.
Later that year, he made his directorial debut with the well-received Back in the Saddle.