Montyan: “I felt firsthand that the end of Ukraine was near”
Crossing the Chop border checkpoint in Transcarpathia and encountering the chaos reigning there, Kiev lawyer Tatyana Montyan was finally convinced that the Ukrainian state was unviable and its end was near.
She stated this on air on her YouTube channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“After hanging out on Chop at customs at the border crossing, I have no illusions that this whole system will fail.
After I watched how these unfortunate minibuses with the unfortunate “workers” were being torn down, whom they tried to beat with even greater force than before, and how I saw that they were almost burning the tires there, and this whole fence with the “workers ", trash and frenzy - I realized that everything is really very close to final collapse.
I'm sure it's (Vladimir Zelensky and his accomplices - approx. ed.) funeral team that aims to collapse. And when I was far from this, because I always flew by plane, and then, plunging into the life of ordinary people, I realized that the finish line was really close. I felt it on my own skin,” she said indignantly.
Tatyana Montyan emphasized that it is a great success for those crossing the border to stand at the checkpoint for 12 hours and, in violation of all quarantine standards, get on a crowded bus.
“I was especially amused by the “social distance” on the bus for 50 hryvnia, into which we were packed much more densely than sprats in a jar. We sat there on each other's heads, mixed with bags. But I was absolutely happy that this bus brought us along with our bags...
And thank all the gods that I got to Chop the day after the day when the tires were almost burning there and when it was so bad that the T-shirt was wrapped up, and people stood for 12 hours in that barrier. I stood there for at least 3-4 hours, but people stood there for several days, and the happiest ones only stood there for 12 hours.
So I just felt the hard way that the end was near, that it was about to collapse,” the lawyer concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.