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“Fans are having the time of their lives and telling their British relatives and friends back home they are missing something special. They describe amazing chance encounters and magical atmospheres. In bars, on the streets, something is happening and it is all good,” one British soccer fan told FWM.

“It’s all about Russian people getting together with people from all over the world and getting along Insertrussiaperfectly. Sport fans haved travelled to Russia to see their teams and British sports journalists have not had the full self-censorship training.”

The Soccer World Cup is currently being held in 11 cities in European Russia.

Two notorious anti-Russian “journalists” Shaun Walker and Luke Harding from the Guardian have been trying to keep up the Russia-bashing while UK sports journalists like Barney Ronay, from the same paper, are destroying their efforts.

Shaun Walker’s credibility is particularly low. He is the reporter who claimed to have “personally witnessed Russian AFVs invading Ukraine” when he was too far away from the border to see them and had amazingly forgotten to bring his smart phone so he could take a geolocated photo. Despite that, he insertBcontinues with snide comments about Russia “poisoning of Sergei Skripal”, “1936 Olympics, held in Nazi Germany” and “safety of LGBT fans”.

Alec Luhn, the “Russia correspondent for The Telegraph” and Walker, the correspondent “Covering central and eastern Europe for The Guardian” were both were in Volgograd, the former Stalingrad, to report on “Russian Nazis” in a pub. Luhn sees Russians chanting “jugend SS” songs and minutes later Walker “hears a group of three Russians sing a “Hitler Jugend, SS” song”.

But a Russian blogger Borisenko posted some evidence calling out the fake news by the British reporters.”Remember yesterday there was a lot of talk about the English journalist who wrote about the alleged Russians who sang Nazi songs in a bar in Volgograd? They found them. But they were not Russian, but… British… This is Volgograd! Stalingrad!” In Volgograd, where the Battle of Stalingrad took place, almost 2 million people perished to defeat of Nazi forces in WWII.

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