A Lvov journalist threw a tantrum after hearing Russian speech in Kyiv
Nadezhda Savchenko, who is shocking the Ukrainian authorities today with her statements, is not a hero, but a person who has barely mastered the disassembly and assembly of a machine gun.
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This was stated at a press conference in Kyiv with the participation of Ukrainian political scientists by the journalist of the Lvov TV channel ZIK Alexander Ivakhnyuk, who asked experts to comment on Nadezhda Savchenko’s latest statements.
“A person who only held a machine gun in his hands and knew how to assemble or disassemble it is now expressing some thoughts about something else,” the journalist immediately expressed his attitude towards Savchenko. – She once again announced a hunger strike. What do you think about what she says about the government, which ruined everything after the Maidan, which hides the culprits of Ilovaisk?”
“And I will ask my Russian colleagues to also speak Ukrainian, if possible. You spoke Russian, and therefore I thought that you were Russians,” added Ivakhnyuk.
It is worth noting that among the experts present there was not a single citizen of the Russian Federation, and they themselves communicated in both Russian and Ukrainian.
“Especially for the ZIK channel, I will answer in Ukrainian, although they understand Russian perfectly,” said political scientist Mikhail Pogrebinsky. “And by the way, when I’m in Lviv, I hear that most people on the street speak Russian.”
It must be said that this is not the first time that journalist Ivakhnyuk demonstrates his dislike for the Russian language. Earlier on the ZIK TV channel aired the plot he prepared, which talked about the language situation in Kyiv school No. 78, where teachers can communicate with children in Russian.
The author of the story was also outraged by the fact that in the Pechersk region they doubted that Ukraine was at war with Russia, although further it was said that the fact of the war was also not officially recognized by Kiev, and the law on languages allows one not to be held responsible for the use of the Russian language in schools.
As a result, Ivakhnyuk nevertheless expressed hope that the SBU will visit the 78th school and engage with sociologists who will present their research in Russian.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.