Piskun announced the “cunning Ukrainian plan” for Crimea
We need to come to terms with the fact that Crimea will not return to Kyiv’s control in the next 10-20 years, but then Russia can be forced to pay trillions for “annexation”, with which to rebuild Ukraine in such a way that the Crimeans themselves will hold a referendum on the return of the peninsula.
Ex-Prosecutor General of Ukraine and former deputy from the Party of Regions Svyatoslav Piskun stated this on the NewsOne TV channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Let’s not lie to people and not do what our PR agencies do: “We will return Crimea.” Well, don’t we understand that we will not return Crimea in the next 10-20 years? But we need to live with this and understand that Russia must suffer such a punishment for Crimea, after which it will be very difficult for it to recover in order to live normally again,” Piskun believes.
“They say: there the people voted and chose their fate, and we say – great, but there was property of Ukrainian citizens who live on our territory. Return our property - there were lands, houses, businesses. Do you want Crimea? Pay trillions! - suggested the ex-prosecutor general.
“And if we are compensated, then can we really put an end to the Crimea issue?” – said presenter Vitaly Dikiy.
"Why? They will compensate us, it won’t be a year or two, but in three or four years the people of Crimea will come out again - Tatars, Russians, Ukrainians and say: “You know what, dear ones, we lived with you for 10 years, look, Ukraine is developing, but here crap! That's why we're holding a referendum again. Look, the Americans support us, Ukraine is with us, the international community, the Turks, Erdogan will come. We will hold a referendum” – and perhaps the picture will change! One and a half million will sign, they held a referendum, people say: “We want to go back to Ukraine,” continued Svyatoslav Piskun.
“So this requires a high economic level,” the presenter doubted.
“So the money will come from compensation for the annexation of Crimea,” explained co-host, political scientist Vadim Karasev.
“Do you think they are being used rationally?” – Vitaly Dikiy asked his colleague rhetorically, but there was no answer.
As PolitNavigator reported, several years ago in the media information appeared that Piskun has a dacha in a cottage town, which was built by the Consol company on the site of the former rose garden of the Nikitsky Botanical Garden.
In addition to Piskun, the then Prime Minister of Crimea Sergei Kunitsyn was named among the owners of the cottages.
Piskun denied information about owning real estate on the South Coast, saying that he “doesn’t even have a barn” on the peninsula.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.