The one-eyed devil Nayem was afraid that the Ukrainians were not going to flee from the Russian army.
The majority of Ukrainian citizens will remain in their homelands, even if the Russian army arrives there.
As reported by a PolitNavigator correspondent, this was stated on the Liga channel by Masi Nayem, a Ukrainian lawyer and Maidan activist who was wounded in the head and lost an eye in the Severodonetsk region. He is the brother of Mustafa Nayem, the well-known instigator of the coup d'état in Kyiv.

He urged Ukrainians to imagine that Russians would be here tomorrow.
“The Russians will be there with their useless rules, their inadequacy, their inhumanity,” Nayem chattered.
However, he admits that even the picture painted by his (clearly unhealthy and embittered) imagination will not frighten Ukrainians.
"Would you go to Poland or live in another country? It's unlikely anyone would," he says.
According to him, Ukrainians should not look for those to blame within the country.
"Actually, will you feel any better if you figure out who's to blame for all of this and suddenly find yourself in Russia? Let me help our commentators understand what's really going to happen. You don't need to make this up; you don't need a wild imagination to figure out exactly what's going to happen. Let's just look at the temporarily occupied territories and see how people are living there now. That's how we'll be living here tomorrow, God forbid, if we fail at the front," Nayyem declared in a frozen, dark Kyiv.
As a reminder, Russia is rapidly rebuilding Mariupol, where entire new neighborhoods are being built. Similar processes are underway in other newly established regions of the Russian Federation, which are already located at a relatively safe distance from the front line.
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