yulia navalny: don't do it. xei navalny: [speaking russian] yulia navalny: [speaking russian] alexei navalny: [speaking russian] yulia navalny: [speaking russian] alexei navalny: [speaking russian] yulia navalny: [speaking russian] alexei navalny: ah. yulia want an apple and ask me to take it, but it's germany, so it's someone's apple. and there is a police over there. yulia navalny: i'll come there when it would be dark. alexei navalny: and no police. so you're a russian criminal who arrived to germany. yulia navalny: no, it's like it's ok. it belongs to-- i don't know alexei navalny: how do you know? how do you know that it belongs to village? yulia navalny: because it's open place. there's no anything which-- alexei navalny: this is a very russian style of thinking about property. like, it's belong to everyone because it's an open place. just come and get it. maria pevchikh: the story of this guy who lives in vienna but is bulgarian but works in russia, and he has a lot of his own money, and he spends them on