Hackers tweet resignation of Russian PM
Many of the hacked tweets criticised Russian government policies
By : DC Correspondent
Update: 2014-08-14 13:43 GMT
Moscow: Hackers broke into Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev's Twitter account on Thursday, tweeting his resignation and criticising President Vladimir Putin.
"I'm resigning. I'm ashamed of the government's actions. Forgive me," said Medvedev's Russian-language Twitter account. "I've wanted to say this for a long time: Vova you're wrong!" said another tweet, using the nickname for Vladimir.
Medvedev, even when he served as president, was considered the second fiddle to Putin. Medvedev's "Twitter account has been hacked, the messages are not genuine. We're working on the problem," a government spokesman told the state-tun RIA Novosti news agency.
However, hacked messages continued to appear, and his account quickly became the top trender in Moscow, with the number of followers of his account swiftly rising by 10,000 to over 2.5 million. Many of the hacked tweets criticised Russian government policies.
"Crimea isn't ours. Please retweet," said a message as Mevedev, Putin and lawmakers were set to meet Thursday to discuss problems on the Black Sea peninsula since Russia annexed it from Ukraine in March. "We could return to the 1980s. That is sad. If that is the objective of my colleagues in the Kremlin, they'll achieve that quickly," said another.
Some fear that prohibition of food imports from the EU nations and the United States in response to Western sanctions over Ukraine could cause long food lines reminiscent of those the Soviet Union experienced in the 1980s. The government has also ordered increased domestic food production in terms that recall Soviet economic plans.
Another criticised a regulation Medvedev signed into force which will require users to register, including providing their passport information, to use public Wi-Fi sites. "Despite our initiative certain network hooligans don't give a damn about network access by passport," said another tweet, followed by a Russian version of a smiley face.