Resort Alushta could not squeeze Ukraine out of itself
Four years after Crimea joined the Russian Federation, the resort town of Alushta still resembles a city from the Ukrainian period.
Thus, journalist Sergei Sardyko published photographs of city signs, road signs and advertising signs made in Ukrainian, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
He called for either the inscriptions to be translated into Russian or written in the three official languages of Crimea.
“Judging by the road signs and signs in the very center of the resort, Alushta has remained a Ukrainian city, but soon we will celebrate the 5th anniversary of the Crimean spring of 2014! It is necessary to make inscriptions in Russian or simultaneously in 3 languages (Russian, Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar) in accordance with the legislation of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Crimea,” writes Sardyko.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.