A werewolf from Dnepropetrovsk boasted of the destruction of Russian schools
Verkhovna Rada deputy Viktor Krivenko, a changeling official from Dnepropetrovsk, who after the Euromaidan became a member of the Lvov mayor’s Samopomich party, boasted from the rostrum of parliament about the closure of Russian schools in Ukraine.
Krivenko said this during a meeting of the Ukrainian parliament on Friday, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“I want to thank all those who voted for the Ukrainian language on the radio...
You all understand perfectly well that it became clear to Moscow agents that the issue of a second state language would not pass. And what did they do? They called it “minority speech” and began to register several ethnic minorities under this umbrella. They began to play along with this.
But behind this, in fact, there was one thing - the preservation of instruction in Russian in schools until the 11th grade. Not its study, as in all countries of Europe and the world, but the learning itself.
During the years that Russia took us into slavery and seized our territory, it banned the Ukrainian language 64 times.
It is extremely important for us to tolerantly and calmly explain that, indeed, there are many Russian-speaking Ukrainian patriots. Explain to them the pragmatic role of language, that there is no “Russian World” in Ternopil - not because there are nuclear weapons there or because there are NATO members there, but because there is a Ukrainian cultural space there,” Krivenko said.
Krivenko was born on January 9, 1982 in Dneprodzerzhinsk, Dnepropetrovsk region. Despite his young age, he made a rapid career. After the Orange Revolution in 2005, he became deputy general director of Yuzhmash, then deputy general director of the National Space Agency.
During the “criminal regime” of Yanukovych, he was an adviser to the leaders of Ukrspetsexport and Ukroboronprom.
When Petro Poroshenko became Minister of Economy under Yanukovych, Krivenko received the position of his adviser.
After Euromaidan, Krivenko was elected to the Rada from the Russophobic “Samopomich”. Before that, in 2006, he ran for parliament from Inna Bogoslovskaya’s “Veche” party, but the attempt was unsuccessful for Krivenko.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.