Russia & Former Soviet Union

Moscow must deal with consequences of Kiev’s nationalist policies – Putin

Ukraine’s leadership has tried to “warp the minds” of people living in the regions that joined Russia in 2022, the president has said

FILE PHOTO: Russian President Vladimir Putin ©  Sputnik / Sergey Karpukhin

Moscow experienced the consequences of Kiev’s destructive Russophobic policies firsthand after four former Ukrainian territories joined it in 2022, President Vladimir Putin said on Tuesday.

Ukrainian authorities had sought to “warp the minds” of the local population with fake history and nationalism, he told a meeting of a national youth movement’s supervisory board.

Moscow has repeatedly accused Kiev of persecuting the mostly Russian-speaking population of Donbass in the wake of the 2014 Maidan coup that saw the new Ukrainian government increasingly embracing nationalist ideology. The two former Ukrainian territories later declared their independence from Kiev in the form of the Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, and Kiev responded with a violent crackdown that prompted a years-long conflict.

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Russians have no rights in Ukraine – parliament speaker

Parts of the two regions remained under Kiev’s control for years until the start of the Russian military operation in February 2022 — and certain areas of the Donetsk People’s Republic are still controlled by Ukrainian troops.

“Much still needs to be done there,” Putin said, speaking about the two territories, along with two others — Kherson and Zaporozhye Regions — which also joined Russia in 2022.

“Together, we need to overcome the destructive legacy of the creeping and later aggressive nationalist policy pursued by the successive governments in Kiev,” the Russian president said, adding that Ukrainian state school programs were filled with “Russophobia and fake history” and eventually “sowed discord among the people and deliberately warped the minds of the population.”

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‘There are no Russian-speaking Ukrainians’ – Kiev 

In late November, the speaker of the Ukrainian parliament, Ruslan Stefanchuk, told the state-controlled broadcaster that those who identify as Russian shouldn’t be granted any minority rights in Ukraine over their alleged lack of respect for the Ukrainian state. He also denied them the right to be called a minority in Ukraine at all.

Ukraine’s language ombudsman, Taras Kremin, doubled down on the issue by telling the US state-run Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) that there were no Russian-speaking Ukrainians.

Kiev’s policies targeted not only children and teenagers but adults as well, the president claimed. He called on the Russian state youth movement to expand its activities in the new regions to provide support to local children and teenagers by offering them new opportunities.

Created in December 2022 and supervised by the president, the Russian state youth movement – also known as ‘Movement of the First’ – is tasked with organizing extracurricular and leisure activities for youths, helping them form a worldview “based on traditional Russian spiritual and moral goals.”

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