Author Archives: RomanInUkraine

Pro-Russian Hooligans in Kharkiv Didn’t Know How to Use Metro

Kharkiv-Pro-Russians-Dont-Know-How-to-Use-Metro

Станция метро «Советская». Ближайший вход от горсовета. Автоматы по продаже талонов на проезд. Возле автоматов огромная очередь – только мужчины. Покупая талоны, подходят к турникетам и спрашивают: «Куда это засовывать?».

(Простите за качество фото – ребята были категорически против того, чтобы их снимали)
“Sovetskaya” Metro station. The nearest the entrance of City Hall. Stamp vending machines. Near machines huge turn-only men. Buy tickets to turniketam and ask: “where is the stick?”.

(Sorry for the quality of the images-the guys were totally against their filmed) (Translated by Bing)

The statement of a British sailor about Kozaks being “repatriated” by the UK and US forces during Operation Keelhaul

The statement of a British sailor about Kozaks being “repatriated” by the UK and US forces during Operation Keelhaul:

“I took part in the evacuation of Dunkirk. Our soldiers felt very badly. I helped to fish out Germans from the sunken Bismarck, which received the greatest number of torpedoes in history. I saw the population of Malta sitting in the cellars for many weeks. I saw Malta being bombed incessantly and deafened by explosions of bombs and shells. They were exhausted from constant explosions and alarms. I lived through the sinking of my own ship. I know about jumping into the water at night, dark and without bottom, and the terrifying shouts for help of the drowning, and then the boat, and looking for the rescue ship. It was a nightmare. I drove German prisoners captured during the invasion of Normandy. They were almost dying from fear. But all that is nothing. The real, terrible, unspeakable fear I saw during the convoying and repatriation of people to Soviet Russia. They were becoming white, green and grey with the fear that took hold of them. When we arrived at the port and were handing them over to the Russians, the repatriates were fainting and losing their senses. And only now I know what a man’s fear is who lived through hell, and that it is nothing compared to the fear of a man who is returning to the Soviet hell. ”

Donetsk Republic vs Russian Military

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3MFBmG3cbvw

This is the forward elements of Russian Spetsnaz taking over a police station near Donetsk, one of the East most cities.

The men in front of the building are saying “Guys, we are with you, this is not neccessary”, and the military before they open fire say “If you are with us, let us through”.

Donbas writer, 2012: “Donbas seems to be a place with no future”

I’m reposting this. Here is the opinion of a Donbas writer after visiting Lviv. Let’s remember what we’re fighting for. It would be a loss in terms of emboldening enemies, but that might be all.

Two years ago, a writer from Donbas made pretty shocking statements about his home. ” All that’s left for us, for you, is at a minimum for us, the Donbas, to be enclosed with barbed wire and not be let out, so as not to interfere with normal people’s efforts to develop themselves and build a good country.”

This is why I’m happy to leave the fate of Donbas up to the locals (though that’s a difficult thing to do given the extent of professional Russian agitation).

If they show up in force to at least demonstrate against the separatists as is happening in Kharkiv, then they are worth supporting. If they remain passive and indifferent, then let them go, and hope that the Soviet mentality and their oligarch culture goes with them.

https://www.kyivpost.com/opinion/op-ed/donbas-seems-to-be-a-place-with-no-future-125549.html

I wasn’t sure what to say until I sat down in the Lviv-Luhansk train and arrived in my native Luhansk. I disembarked and understood that, besides crying in front of a camera, I wouldn’t succeed in describing the beautiful city of Lviv. And not because there’s nothing to say.

You understand that quite well, if you’ve seen my photographs. There are, I’m ashamed to admit, many, many, many interesting things there. But when I stepped onto my native Donbas-Luhansk land and looked around, I saw and understood that we don’t even have a future. We have no city authorities and no provincial authorities. And it’s not even a question of having no prospects of large-scale change. We have no prospects of any kind of change whatsoever. All that’s left for us, for you, is at a minimum for us, the Donbas, to be enclosed with barbed wire and not be let out, so as not to interfere with normal people’s efforts to develop themselves and build a good country. And at a maximum, I guess, simply to drink ourselves silly. Bye.”

The bit about hopelessness and lack of future prospects is depressing enough. But for a native of Luhansk to recommend enclosing the Donbas with barbed wire is enough to drive one to drink.

….

If Tsikalovsky were a punk with a dog collar and a mohawk, one could dismiss his comments as the rant of an adolescent. But the Proctologist has a university degree in management and has been working for the Luhansk-based Web portal TOP since 2004. And, with a balding pate and intelligent face, he looks as respectable as he sounds.

It’s easy to understand Tsikalovsky’s despair. Lviv is an architectural, historical, and cultural gem. Its infrastructure is a mess and too many of its streets and buildings require capital repairs, but it feels like a place that will, one day, be a fabulously prosperous town. Small wonder that the Financial Times recently included it on its list of top 10 European “cities of the future.”

In contrast, Luhansk is your quintessential Soviet, and Sovietized, city. Obviously, dreadful architecture need not doom a city. As every New Yorker knows, with a little bit of imagination, even ugliness can be made interesting and drabness can be made more livable.

But, as Tsikalovsky understands, his city’s real problem is that it’s still misruled by people who don’t see beyond the Stalinist past: “We have no city authorities and no provincial authorities.” And note Tsikalovsky’s triple emphasis: “We have no prospects of any kind of change whatsoever.”

Donbas has potential, but they are plagued by a Soviet mindset and a powerful mafia.

I think their best chance to free themselves of this would be to find some degree of autonomy within a Ukrainian state.

But for whatever measure of freedom they want, they need to fight for it. They need to risk something. If they remain a passive, grey Soviet mass, then let them have their fate.

I want to be surrounded by people willing to confront tyranny. Look where such people live: http://romaninukraine.com/map-of-protest-victims-by-region/

Vice – Coverage of the Support for Russia in Donetsk (historically about 30%) – “They didn’t pay us our salary . . . the money went to the Ukrainian Army”

Here we get coverage of the genuine support:

[youtube]wetleAB1XmY[/youtube]

@3:30: “They didn’t pay us our salary . . . the money went to the Ukrainian Army” — WTF?

According to earlier polls, it’s about 30%.

The pro Russian sentiment died down after the horrific violence of pro Russian protests in mid-March (http://romaninukraine.com/eye-witness-account-of-donetsk-violence-of-a-few-days-ago/), but it seems to be recovering.

Here’s a good article discussing the dip in support: http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/pro-russian-protests-in-eastern-ukraines-donetsk-region-diminish/2014/04/03/f1bd1fe0-db2e-4e23-9ceb-cc2f645ae7c5_story.html

Most of the militants freed from Sloviansk

In Slovyansk during the counterterrorist operation exempt SBU building, Directorate of Internal Affairs, as well as the mayor’s office released from the Russian special forces.

This is reported by eyewitnesses of the event.

http://translate.googleusercontent.com/translate_c?depth=1&hl=en&rurl=translate.google.com&tl=en&u=http://hvylya.org/news/exclusive/bolshaya-chast-slavyanska-osvobozhdena-ot-boevikov.html&usg=ALkJrhjRlGNrMq5cjBGqufwKM4GRV8adBQ