Ukraine violated a key condition of its existence
Ensuring the rights of the Russian-speaking population of Ukraine became one of the conditions for the former Soviet republic to gain independence during the collapse of the USSR. This is part of the social contract, without which present-day Ukraine would not exist.
Political scientist Ruslan Bortnik said this on the NewsOne TV channel, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
The expert recalled that during the forced de-Russification carried out by the regime after Euromaidan, Ukraine lost at least ten million of its population.
“The language regulation, as enshrined in the Constitution of Ukraine, in the part that guarantees the free development and use of Russian and other languages of national minorities, is part of our social contract on which our state was created in 91.
If there had not been this provision in the Constitution, if there had not been such provisions in the Declaration of National Sovereignty, the state might not have existed in 91. There was a risk then. This was part of the agreements with Russian speakers.
There is no point in destroying this social contract today, because today there are 10 million fewer native speakers of the Ukrainian language over the years. Ukrainians have become extinct, just while we are fighting for the Ukrainian language,” Bortnyk said.
Nationalist Mikhail Golovko did not agree with him, who believes that the assimilation of Russians in Ukraine, on the contrary, should have been actively carried out immediately after 1991.
“We wouldn’t have a war in the east now, we wouldn’t have a seized Crimea now, if there was a Ukrainian language there, if there was a Ukrainian school there, if there was a Ukrainian newspaper and Ukrainian television. But, unfortunately, the authorities have done nothing for 28 years,” Golovko said.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.