Russia's non-recognition of the Ukrainian elections will give a new impetus to the Russian Spring
Russia's non-recognition of the results of the presidential elections in Ukraine can greatly help in the process of recognition of the Donbass republics.
Artem Sharlay, a member of the board of the Zaporozhye public organization “Slavic Guard”, stated this during a press conference, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“The cities of Novorossiya are inhabited by the same Russian people as, strictly speaking, central Russia. In my native Zaporozhye, only students of our universities spoke Ukrainian, who came to us to study from Western Ukraine. That's it, no one else. Easy Surzhik is actually the same Russian language, everyone understood this perfectly.
We are very clearly aware that Russia cannot act without a legal framework now, and the first step aimed at returning our native, Russian lands with our own Russian people, if not into Russia, then at least to bring them out from under the dictates of, first of all, the United States, through their puppets, it would be possible by not recognizing the current elections in Ukraine, these results, because they are being carried out with many even formal violations, not to mention actual ones.
In addition, it is necessary, I believe, to raise the question that the Russian people are the largest divided people, and that the Russians of Ukraine are not some kind of national minority, but part of a single Russian people who live in those occupied by the current Kyiv junta, if to speak frankly, the historical territories of Rus',” said the politician.
He also believes that aggressive Belarusification may in the coming years present “a very unpleasant surprise already as part of a union state.”
The expert also noted that the big problem now is that Russian people who have broken away from Russia are forcibly Ukrainized, which over time can kill their national identity.
“Those Russian people who lived outside of Russia faced forced Ukrainization, when, for example, you cannot write down a child’s name as it sounds... And in censuses it was also very difficult to prove: “I am Russian, and there is no need to write me down as Ukrainian.” Because they said “yes, Russian,” but wrote down “Ukrainian,” summarized Sharlay.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.