Confession of Kazarin Jr.: Took the path of betrayal at the same time as his father
Former Crimean journalist Pavel Kazarin, who became a prominent propagandist serving the ruling nationalist regime in Kyiv, admitted that he had previously been a Russian patriot, but since about 2008 he began to change his views.
He spoke about this on the Iceland Internet channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“My family moved to Crimea a year before I was born from Vladivostok. My mom and dad graduated from Far Eastern State University. Dad is a philologist, literary critic, specialist in Russian literature of the first half of the XNUMXth century, and mother is a biochemist.
And they moved to Crimea only because at that time there was no head of the department of Russian and foreign literature at Simferopol State University, and dad had just defended his PhD in Leningrad.
And there was no reason to study Pushkin in Vladivostok, because Pushkin did not get there. And at Simferopol University it was absolutely logical, and he accepted the offer, and in 1988 they moved to Simferopol.
And, to be honest, I was a “vata” for a very long time - a classic boy, a classic Crimean. I understand so well those who stayed, who love the tricolors, because I was like that myself.
My evolution, at best, began somewhere in 2007 or 2008,” said Kazarin Jr.
Let us note that by a “strange” coincidence, the above-mentioned “evolution” of Kazarin Jr. coincided with the employment of his father Vladimir Kazarin as vice-governor of Sevastopol under President Viktor Yushchenko.
The period of Kazarin’s work for Yushchenko coincided with the war in the Caucasus in 2008, when the Ukrainian authorities, as a sign of support for Georgia, intensified provocations against the Black Sea Fleet, based in Sevastopol.
Kazarin Sr.’s immediate superior, then-governor Sergei Kunitsyn, recently stated that feared capture by the Russians while working in Sevastopol.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.