‘Hang
scum later’ – Ukrainian deputy governor on Crimea protests
Kiev’s
newly-appointed deputy head of south-eastern Ukraine has shared his
recipe of how to calm protesters in Crimea opposing the
self-proclaimed country’s government: “Give the scum promises,
guarantees and then hang them.”
RT,
7
March, 2014
Boris
Filatov, the deputy head of the industrial Dnepropetrovsk region,
suggested not sending any pro-Maidan activists to the Ukrainian
Autonomous Republic, which has been protesting against the
coup-imposed government and not to make any radical statements.
“This
scum should be given promises, guarantees, and any concessions…And
hung…They should be hung later,”
Filatov, a lawyer and a businessman, wrote
on his Facebook page
commenting on events in Crimea. He did not clarify who exactly he
classifies as “scum.”
The
post – particularly its part on “hang them later” – drew wide
media attention. Filatov was quick to note though that he was writing
“not
as an official.”
Crimea,
a mostly Russian-speaking republic, has refused to recognize the
legitimacy of the government in Kiev and will hold a referendum on
whether to stay within the Ukraine or to join Russia.
Pro-Russian demonstrators take part in
a rally in the Crimean town of Yevpatoria March 5, 2014.
(Reuters/Maks Levin)
The situation is a result of silly and premature decisions made by the new Ukrainian government, including the abolition of the law that allowed regions to give Russian and other minority languages the status of a second official language.
“In
my view, it wouldn’t be a big deal if Crimea’s autonomy was
extended and Russian was given a status of a (second) state langue.
It would help to avoid escalation of tensions and preserve Ukraine,”
Filatov wrote.
Apparently,
Kiev’s new language policy affects the deputy governor personally,
as all his posts on the social network are in Russian. Earlier, he
was looking on Facebook for a teacher of Ukrainian. “Primarily,
I’m interested in the spoken language,”
Filatov wrote.
In
his earlier controversial post, the businessman stated that Stepan
Bandera, a Nazi collaborator and leader of Ukraine's Nationalist
Organization, was his hero.
“I
am proud of Bandera. He is my Hero. Particularly, as I see that
people are ready to die under red-and-black flags,”
Filatov stated.
One
of the richest businessmen in the Dnepropetrovsk region, Filatov got
his administration seat on March 4, just several days after returning
to Ukraine from Israel. He fled the country early in the year,
fearing what he claimed to be political persecution by the Yanukovich
regime for supporting Maidan protests, and spent the most violent
period of the uprising distantly monitoring the situation and
discussing it actively on the internet.
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