Putin rejects Ukraine law on indigenous rights
A Law on Indigenous Peoples passed last month by Ukraine's parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, has aroused rage from Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose forces have been occupying the Crimean Peninsula since 2014. Bill No. 5506 was introduced by President Volodymyr Zelensky on May 18, the day that the Crimean Tatars commemorate Stalin's 1944 deportation of the entire people from their homeland. The law recognizes three indigenous peoples of Ukraine—the Tatars, Karaites and Krymchaks. It guarantees these peoples collective and individual enjoyment of all cultural, educational and linguistic rights, in accordance with the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
Putin in an interview after passage of the law asserted that the present leaders of Ukraine are clearly hostile to Russia. "Otherwise, how can you explain a law where Russians are a non-indigenous people? What will this lead to? Some people will simply leave." He then compared these imagined "consequences" with the effects of a "weapon of mass destruction." In another interview, he said that the bill "reminded" him of Nazi Germany, that it divides people into "indigenous, first-class and second-class people and so forth."
Condensed from Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group, July 2
See our last posts on the wartime deportation of the Crimean Tatars, and the propaganda device of fascist pseudo-anti-fascism.
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