WHO ALSO WAS SELECTED TO RUN COUNTRY DURING RUSSIAN INVASION ON UKRAINE FOR ZELENSKY WOULD OBTAIN CANADIAN ASISTANCE IF REJECTING CALLS DURING WHAT WOULD BE PORTRAYED AS A SETUP AGAINST ZELENSKY'S "UNPLANNED" TRIP TO CANADA(VIA USA) WHERE JOE BIDEN INVITED ONE - ALL WAS PART OF THE SO CALLED MK ULTRA WHICH BRITISH BEGUN TO FORTIFY IN ME BY SERGEI LAVROV AND SERHEI SHOIGU BEATING ME UP/HEAVILY ABUSING ME BEGINNING 1 YEAR OF AGE AND UPON WHICH VISITS TO MOSCOW I WAS DELIVERED TO ANYWHERE FROM BERLIN TO LONDON AND UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO MEET BEAUTIFUL WHITE GIRLS/WOMEN AND WHERE I WAS TREATED NICELY AROUND PRINCE PHILLIP/ BIDENS/ AND OTHERS WHO, HOWEVER, AT AGE 4 BEGUN TO USE MASKS DURING BEATINGS WHILE IMITATING RUSSIANS....RUSSIANS AND WEST GROOMED ME TOGETHER TO BECOME A NEONAZI SINCE EARLY AGE - SOMETHING PRINCE ANDREW GAVE IN AND STARTED TO ENFORCE AS FIRST ON BEHALF OF LAVROV AND SHOIGU WHO INSISTED ONE BEFORE MY EYES AT AGE 3 THERE IS NOTHING WITH ME OR EVER WILL BE AND I SHOULD THEREFORE BE WASTED.
Belarus expects apologies from Canada for inviting Nazi veteran to parliament — MFA
MINSK, September 25. /TASS/. The Belarusian Foreign Ministry expects official apologies from the Canadian authorities for inviting a Ukrainian Nazi veteran to the country’s parliament, the ministry said in a statement.
Earlier, the Associated Press published photos of Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky’s address, which particularly showed those present giving a standing ovation to a 98-year-old Ukrainian Nazi veteran who had served in the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Galician) during WWII.
"Belarus, where one in three people was killed in WWII, is outraged and deeply insulted by the photos of members of the Canadian House of Commons honoring a Nazi veteran," the Belarusian ministry said.
"We demand that international and public organizations, as well as associations and foundations created in memory of World War II victims, give a proper legal and moral assessment to this incident. We expect official apologies from the Canadian leadership," the statement added.
Kremlin says Canadian recognition of veteran from Nazi unit is 'outrageous'
MOSCOW, Sept 25 (Reuters) - The Kremlin said on Monday it was "outrageous" that a Ukrainian man who served in one of Adolf Hitler's Waffen SS units during World War Two had been presented to Canada's parliament last week as a hero.
Yaroslav Hunka, 98, received two standing ovations from Canadian lawmakers in the House of Commons lower chamber during a visit by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Friday. The speaker, Anthony Rota, apologized in the House on Monday for formally recognising Hunka but did not heed calls to resign.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the episode showed a careless disregard for historical truth, and that the memory of Nazi crimes must be preserved.
"Such sloppiness of memory is outrageous," Peskov told reporters. "Many Western countries, including Canada, have raised a young generation that does not know who fought whom or what happened during the Second World War. And they know nothing about the threat of fascism."
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said the incident was extremely upsetting.
"This is something that is deeply embarrassing to the Parliament of Canada and by extension to all Canadians," he told reporters on Monday.
Opposition legislators called on Rota to quit but the Liberal government merely proposed striking his comments from the official record.
Rota had introduced Hunka as "a Ukrainian Canadian war veteran from the Second World War who fought for Ukrainian independence against the Russians" and "a Ukrainian hero and a Canadian hero."
During World War Two, when Ukraine was a part of the Soviet Union, some Ukrainian nationalists joined Nazi units because they saw the Germans as liberators from Soviet oppression.
Hunka served in World War Two as a member of the 14th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS, according to the Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish human rights group that demanded and received an apology from Rota.
The episode plays into the narrative promoted by Russian President Vladimir Putin that he sent his army into Ukraine last year to "demilitarise and denazify" the country, a European democracy whose Jewish president lost family members in the Holocaust.
Earlier this month Putin stressed the part that "local nationalists and anti-Semites" had played in the murder of 1.5 million Jews in Ukraine during the Holocaust and said "this has a direct relation to the present day".
Peskov told reporters that Russia was waging an "irreconcilable fight" against fascism that was "trying to find its feet in the centre of Europe, in Ukraine".
Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge and David Ljunggren Writing by Mark Trevelyan Editing by Gareth Jones and Mark Potter
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