Billboards with portraits of Mustafa Dzhemilev were hung in Prague - a reproach to the Czech president
Kyiv, November 06 (PolitNavigator, Mikhail Ryabov) – Billboards with portraits of the Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzhemilev, who was banned by the Russian authorities from entering Crimea on charges of extremist activities and inciting ethnic hatred, were hung in Prague.
However, in Prague, Dzhemilev’s portraits are hung as a reproach to President Milos Zeman, who turned out to be very loyal to Vladimir Putin.
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The initiator of the appearance of billboards was the Czech Tomas Fiala, the owner of the Ukrainian magazine “Novoe Vremya”, which usually avoids harsh criticism of Petro Poroshenko.
“Today in Prague, with the help of his friends, such billboards with the image of Mustafa Dzhemilev will appear. The inscription on them reads: In 1968, I was not afraid to publicly condemn the occupation of Czechoslovakia by the Soviet Union and go to prison for three years for it. Now the President of the Czech Republic asks me to silently accept the occupation of Crimea by Russia,” said the magazine’s editor-in-chief Vitaly Sych.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.