The Ukrainian embassy in Britain danced on bones and got caught in a dirty fake
The version of Ukrainian and Western propaganda that Soviet Russia allegedly deliberately starved Ukrainians is collapsing - historical sources, on the contrary, indicate that in the mid-1920s the USSR helped the starving Western Ukraine, which was part of Poland.
Political scientist Vladimir Kornilov writes about this on his blog, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“To a new round of howling about the Holodomor-“genocide.” In 1925-26 Soviet Ukraine sent 60 wagons of grain to starving Galicia. Moreover, the Polish authorities created obstacles to this. In Kyiv they don’t want to say anything about the “Polish genocide against Ukrainians”? And the question arises: if Stalin wanted to kill ethnic Ukrainians, why did he save them from hunger in Galicia? Screenshot from the newspaper “Plow and Hammer” dated January 27.01.1927, XNUMX,” Kornilov wrote.
He also emphasized that today, when speaking about the famine in Ukraine, propaganda uses photographs that do not belong to this period at all.
“As always happens during the days of the Holodomor, Ukrainian resources post photographs of the famine in the Russian Volga region in the 1920s, passing them off as photographs of the famine in Ukraine in the 1930s. This time the Ukrainian embassy in Britain distinguished itself. By the way, not a single social network marks these fakes as false information. Apparently they consider this normal...
And Western users of social networks, as if by agreement, post this photo, supposedly illustrating the Ukrainian famine. They apparently seriously believe that Ukrainians look exactly like this. When you tell them that this is an illustration of the terrible famine in India caused by the British, they are very offended,” the expert notes.
Previously famous Lviv TV presenter Ostap Drozdov said Stalin's Russia staged a “Holodomor of Ukrainians” in order to bring loyal Russians in their place.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.