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Putin says Russia must undergo a 'self-cleansing of society' to purge 'bastards and traitors' as thousands flee the country

Vladimir Putin points his finger.
Russian President Vladimir Putin. Photo by Alexei Nikolsky\TASS via Getty Images

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin said Wednesday Russia must undergo a "self-cleansing of society." 
  • He said doing so would "strengthen our country, our solidarity, togetherness."
  • Thousands of civilians have reportedly fled Russia following its invasion of Ukraine. 
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Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a speech Wednesday that Russia should undergo a "self-cleansing of society" to get rid of the "bastards and traitors" as thousands of Russians tried to flee the country amid its invasion of Ukraine. 

"The collective West is attempting to splinter our society, speculating on military losses, on socioeconomic effects of sanctions, in order to provoke a people's rebellion in Russia," Putin said in a video address shared on Twitter.

"But any people, the Russian people, especially, are able to distinguish true patriots from bastards and traitors and will spit them out," he said of those who did not back the Kremlin.

"I am certain that this necessary and natural self-cleansing of society will only strengthen our country, our solidarity, togetherness, and our readiness to answer any calls to action," Putin said.

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Putin said he was not "judging those with villas in Miami or the French Riviera" or those "who cannot live without foie gras and mussels or so-called gender-based rights" as long as they were "mentally" with Russia.

"The problem does not lie in this, but I repeat, the fact that many of these people inherently, mentally, live elsewhere and not here with us, with our people, with Russia," Putin said.

"This is, in their opinion ... a belonging to the higher caste, the higher race," he said. 

Meanwhile, thousands of Russians are attempting to flee the country in the wake Putin's February 24 invasion of Ukraine.

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Since then, Russian troops have shelled multiple Ukrainian cities, including residential buildings and hospitals.

Several Russians told Insider that they had fled their hometowns for neighboring countries over fears of martial law, border closures, detention, and economic hardships.

Some said they feared they would be detained over their opposing views of the war, as a new law makes it illegal to spread false information about the Russian military, call for the end of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, or support sanctions against Russia. 

Nearly 15,000 people across Russia have been detained since the start of the invasion, according to data from the independent monitoring group OVD-Info.

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Translations by Nikita Angarski.

Breaking Russia Ukraine
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