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Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Russian police keeps traitors safe in Kiev's parliament - nothing new and nothing to worry about for Poroshenko(for now)

Numerous protests have done so far less than nothing for Ukrainian poeple....


I wonder what would they(seen in video bellow) do if they had as many rights as protesters seen above...would they "protest" only or take justice in their hands...was their death in vain for nothing !!????
My suggestion to Ukrainian protesters is to first have leadership which will example them and international public with proven facts about why protests and why real change is necessary(something like this https://goo.gl/BBy2pY would be handy) as just going out there without here stated is worse than a waste of time(when they succeed and you fail, it will take much more to succeed if ever possible at all)....

WITH POLITIC(totally corrupt as well - just as the case is in Slovenia) FROM OPPOSITION TO WHICH WE WITNESS TODAY IN UKRAINE, YOU AND I MY FRIEND WILL REMAIN AS UNKNOWN FOR EVER !!!
Thats you and me Ukraine...you and me Poland and so on...how long !!????? How much longer !!???? How many more "unknown" will die like this...



From rferl.org:

Protesters Clash With Police, Seek Entry Into Ukraine Parliament

KYIV -- Crowds of protesters including coal miners, Chernobyl cleanup workers, and Soviet Afghan war veterans have clashed with police outside the Ukrainian parliament.

Some of the more than 2,000 protesters broke though a police cordon and were trying to enter the parliament building during the demonstration on June 19.

Police used what appeared to be tear gas, but the protest continued.

The protesters included veterans of the Soviet Union's 1979-89 war in Afghanistan, "liquidators" who were sent to the Chernobyl nuclear power plant after the 1986 disaster there, coal miners, and Ukrainians who have fought in the ongoing war with Russia-backed separatists in the country's east.

Their demands included improved benefits for public transportation use, increases in state support for disabled veterans, and the allocation of billions of hryvnyas for the development of the country’s struggling coal industry.


Kyiv police said earlier that the protests caused complications for transport on two major streets in the city center.

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