es fehlen noch die Ferkel Poroschenko, Klitschko, Jazenijuk & Co&Cie mit ihrer SS-Runen-& Hakenkreuz-dekorierten „Nationalgarde“
1
Kurzer Abriss: Wie veranstalte ich eine „bunte Revolution“. Übrigens –
die faschistischen Schläger vom Maidan waren in den baltischen Staaten
und in Polen extra für diesen „Job“ gedrillt und scharf gemacht worden.
Auch von israelischen „Spezialisten“. Jede Aktion dieser Art braucht eine
„Kerntruppe“. Hier waren das die ukrainischen Faschisten und
zusammengekaufte Söldner. Die sollten die Drecksarbeit machen:
EuroMaidan anniversary: 21
steps from peaceful rally to
civil war
Published time: November 21, 2014 10:20
Edited time: November 21, 2014 11:27
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2
A man walks with a Ukrainian flag as smoke from burning tyres set ablaze by demonstrators fill the
sky during a rally held by pro-European protesters in Kiev January 22, 2014. (Reuters / Vasily
Fedosenko)
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Anniversary, Clashes, Conflict, Politics, Protest, Rally, Ukraine
Protesters who went out to Kiev’s Maidan Square exactly a year ago have their goal – a deal with
the EU – achieved. However, they hardly expected the protest would also trigger a bloody civil war
which has already claimed 4,000 lives.
RT takes a look at the milestone events of the past 365 days, which brought Ukraine – and the world
– to where it is now.
1
Then-President Victor Yanukovich’s unwillingness to
sign an Association Agreement with the EU led to
Maidan (Independence Square) in Ukraine’s capital
Kiev filling with protesters on November 21, 2013.
The rally participants were holding hands, waving
flags and chanting slogans like “Ukraine is Europe!”
3
Protesters hold Ukrainian and European Union flags during a rally to support euro integration in
central Kiev November 21, 2013. (Reuters/Gleb Garanich)
2
The brutal dispersal of a protest camp on the
morning of November 30 was a turning point in
the ensuing events. It’s still unclear whose idea it
was to use force against demonstrators.
Yanukovich laid the blame on the city’s police
chief and sacked him. But that was not enough
for the Maidan protesters, who switched from
demands of signing the EU deal to calls for the
toppling of the government.
4
Riot police disperse people supporting EU integration in Independence Square in central Kiev,
November 30, 2013. (Reuters / Inna Sokolovska)
3
Over the course of several weeks, which
e g n a h c o t d e t r a t s n a d i a M f o e c a f e h t d e w o l l o f–
peaceful protesters were more and more
giving way to masked and armed rioters,
often from far-right groups. A collective of
radicals called the Right Sector were among
the most prominent. Peaceful protests evolved
into a continuous stand-off between the
rallying people and riot police.
5
A Ukrainian anti-government protester throws a Molotov cocktail during clashes with riot police in
central Kiev early on January 25, 2014. (AFP Photo / Dmitry Serebryakov)
4
The deadliest day of the Maidan protests came on February 20 when over a hundred people were
killed in the center of Kiev, most of them by sniper fire. The ongoing official investigation blamed a
group of elite soldiers from the Berkut riot police for the killings. But there is a lingering suspicion
that the massacre was committed by somebody among the anti-government forces.
Anmerkung: Für diese Sniper-
Episode(n) braucht es natürlich
speziell “ausgebildete” Kräfte.
Derartige „Sniper“ – Episoden spielten
schon in verschiedenen Operationen
des Imperiums eine Rolle, wenn es
6
galt „Stimmung zu machen“, also
Emotionen anzuheizen und
verschärften umstürzlerischen
Aktivitäten „Rückendeckung zu
verschaffen“. Oder ein Land in einen
Bürgerkrieg zu stürzen indem
verschiedene gesellschaftliche
Gruppen aufeinander gehetzt werden.
Im Falle des EUSA – Staatsstreichs in
Kiew gab es dazu eine interessante
Episode des „Abzuges“ solcher Kräfte.
Niemand wird annehmen, dass diese „Herren“ auf „Entenjagd“ gewesen sind.
Auch sehr schon diese Herren:
7
Auch hier „verschwindet“ derartiges Spezialgesindel.
Es wäre durchaus lohnend zu ermitteln, wer diese
„Hunde des Krieges“ angeworben, losgelassen und
bezahlt hat. Man sollte mal den Herrn Obama fragen.
8
Dabei geht es auch auf Seiten dieser Verbrecher nicht ohne Verletzte ab.
Protesters (!) carry a wounded protester during clashes with poli?e, after gaining new positions near
the Independence square in Kiev on February 20, 2014. (AFP PHhoto / Louisa Gouliamaki)
9
5
The day after the sniper shootings, Yanukovich and opposition leaders signed an EU-brokered
agreement on ending the crisis. Rioting continued in Kiev despite this. The next day the oppositiondriven
Ukrainian parliament, the Verkhovna Rada, held an emergency session, where it was
declared that the president was no longer in power. Yanukovich fled the country, labeling the events
a coup. (Also war das erste Ziel des EUSA-Staatsstreiches erreicht! G.V.)
Deputies of the Ukrainian parliament applaud after voting for a constitution change in Kiev on
February 21, 2014. (AFP Photo / Genya Savilov)
6
Among its first post-coup decisions, the Rada
revoked a law that allowed Russian and other
minority languages to be recognized as
official in multi-cultural regions, triggering
unrest in the mostly Russian-speaking Crimea
and eastern Ukraine.
10
Pro-Russian protesters hold a placard reading as they take part in a pro-Russian rally in the eastern
Ukrainian city of Kharkiv on April 13, 2014. (AFP Photo / Sergey Bobok)
7
With calls rising among right-wing nationalists to
go to dissenting regions and enforce loyalty
through violence, local populations formed selfdefense
units and began to take over government
buildings, similar to how anti-government
protesters did it in Kiev and western Ukraine. In
Crimea, the most Russia-leaning region of
Ukraine, this drive was led by many local elected
officials.
11
A man at a checkpoint on the motorway between Sevastopol and the village of Orlinoye on 16
March, 2014. (RIA Novosti / Valeriy Melnikov)
8
The Crimean people eventually voted for
independence from Ukraine and to rejoin Russia
at a March 16 referendum. The decision was
made by 1.2 million, or 97 percent, of eligible
voters. The result was not recognized by most
Western nations, which claimed that the
referendum was held ‘under a Russian gunpoint’
and implied that Crimea was taken by Russia
through a military occupation.
12
Staff at a polling station in Simferopol count ballots after the referendum on Crimea’s status. (RIA
Novosti / Mikhail Voskresenskiy)
9
With anti-Kiev feeling growing in the other eastern regions,
like Lugansk, Donetsk, Dnepropetrovsk, Kharkov and
Mariupol, the prospect of a parade of secessions was
becoming real. Kiev decided not to take any chances there
and on April 15 launched what it called an ‚anti-terrorist
operation‘ against the anti-government protesters in the
eastern regions. Special volunteer battalions were formed to
take part in the operation. They are being supervised by the
Ministry of Defense, but get their funding from various
sources, including donations of some Ukrainian oligarchs.
13
AFP Photo / Anatolii Boiko
10
One of the worst episodes to have happened in
Ukraine over the year occurred on May 2, when
dozens of people died in flames in Odessa.
Radicals set ablaze the local House of Trade
Unions with protesters opposing the post-coup
government in Kiev blocked inside. None of
those responsible for the crime, however, have
been identified. While Kiev did present its report
on the massacre, the document was allegedly
falsified, as one of the investigators withdrawing
its signature in protest.
14
A protester walks near the trade union building in Odessa May 2, 2014. (Reuters / Yevgeny Volokin)
11
In May 2013, rebels in the Donetsk and
the Lugansk regions organized referendum
on declaring independence from Kiev, a
scenario that the use of force by the
government sought to prevent. President
Poroshenko, who came to power in May
25 early presidential election, intensified
the military crackdown on the breakaway
regions.
15
Ukraine’s President Petro Poroshenko holding the Presidential stemp during a ceremony of his oath
in the Parliament in Kiev. (AFP Photo / Presidential Press-Service / Anastasiya Syrotkyna)
12
The armed conflict, which by that time had escalated
into a fully-fledged civil war, took its toll on foreign
civilians on July 17, when a Malaysian Airlines plane
carrying 298 people was downed over Donetsk
Region. Kiev and its Western backers accuse the
rebels of shooting down the plane with a sophisticated
Russia-supplied surface-to-air missile system. Rebels
deny ever possessing such a system, while Moscow
called for all possibilities to be taken into
consideration, including those of Ukrainian troops
being behind the deed one way or another.
16
OSCE experts examine the crash site of the Boeing aircraft of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17
(MH17/MAS17) from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. (RIA Novosti / Alexey Kudenko)
13
By mid-August the death toll in eastern
Ukraine passed 2,000, according to
conservative UN estimates. The majority
of the fatalities were Ukrainian civilians
trapped in the battle zone with either no
chance to leave or refusing to abandon
their homes even in the face of death.
17
A victim of the armed clash outside Karlivka village, Donetsk Region. (RIA Novosti / Natalia
Seliverstova)
14
Lacking professional and motivated troops to
attack rebel-held sites, the Ukrainian government
resorted to using its superiority in heavy
weapons, subjecting cities in the east to artillery
shelling, airstrikes, incendiary attacks and other
forms of warfare not allowed against residential
areas. Human rights groups accused Kiev, as well
as the rebels, of committing war crimes.
18
A house destroyed during an artillery shelling of Donetsk by the Ukrainian military. (RIA Novosti /
Alexey Kudenko)
15
Those more fortunate fled the war-torn regions in their
hundreds of thousands. According to the UN, by
September the number of refugees in Ukraine
surpassed 1,000,000, with 260,000 going to other
parts of Ukraine and 814,000 to Russia. Moscow
offered the people fleeing across the border benefits,
job opportunities, help with relocating to Russian
regions in need of working hands and other forms of
support.
19
Children in a camp for Ukrainian refugees outside the Russian city of Donetsk, Rostov Region.
(RIA Novosti / Alexei Danichev)
16
On September 5, representatives of Kiev and the
rebels signed a Moscow and OSCE-brokered
ceasefire in Minsk. The semi-official Minsk
agreement gave hope of de-escalation of violence,
disengagement of the warring parties and
eventual reconciliation. Skeptics said it was rather
a break in the hostilities, as both sides had plenty
of those not satisfied with the deal. The violence
continued, albeit on a smaller scale, claiming
additional 1,000 lives by mid-November.
20
A meeting of the Contact Group on Ukrainian reconciliation in Minsk, Belarus. (RIA Novosti / Egor
Eryomov)
17
The regions ravaged by the Ukrainian civil war are in
dire need of even basic essentials like drinking water
and food, medicines and materials to repair damaged
buildings. Russia has been regularly sending
humanitarian aid to rebel-held Donetsk and Lugansk.
The dispatch of the first aid convoy on August 12
sparked heavy resistance from Kiev, which accused
Russia of planning some sort of stealth invasion. After
two weeks of tense negotiations and attempts to get
official approval, Moscow ordered the delivery to
proceed without Kiev’s consent.
21
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk (R) smiles next to British Prime Minister David
Cameron (C) and Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt (L) as they sign the political provisions
of the Association Agreement with Ukraine. (AFP Photo / Pool / Olivier Hoslet)
18
On September 16, Ukraine and the EU signed the
landmark Association Agreement on trade. The
suspension of this deal by the Yanukovich government
triggered the chain of events leading to the current
state of affairs. The most controversial economic parts
of the agreement, however, will not be implemented
until 2016, and for the very reasons it was suspended
in the first place. Once fully in force, Ukraine’s EU
free trade deal will force Russia to repeal preferential
treatment of Ukrainian goods in the Russian market,
which would hit Ukraine’s lucrative export market.
22
Russian humanitarian aid convoy in Donetsk. (RIA Novosti / Alexey Kudenko)
19
Both rebels and Kiev accuse each other of
committing atrocities during the civil war. Both
discovered mass graves in territories they took
from each other during the hostilities. Apparently,
there is a grain of truth in both sets of
accusations. Amnesty International found
evidence of summary executions committed by
both sides, but declined from specifying the scope
of atrocities committed by either side.
23
A Donetsk People’s Republic militiaman is at the site of the graves of peaceful residents discovered
near Mine 22 „Kommunar“ outside Donetsk (stills from video courtesy of the Ruptly)
20
Early November marked what appears to be a
new round of tension in eastern Ukraine. On
November 2, the self-proclaimed Donetsk and
Lugansk People’s Republics voted to elect their
leaders and MPs. Kiev branded the move a breach
of the Minsk agreement, revoked a law giving
special status to the rebel-held areas, and declared
that it will no longer protect most of basic human
rights of the people living there. The UN
estimates the death toll of the conflict to be at
least 4,317, although the actual number may be
much higher.
24
Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko, foreground center, examines weapons while visiting a
training field in the Zhytomyr Region. (RIA Novosti / Nikolay Lazarenko)
21
In early August former opposition leader-turned-Kiev
Mayor Vitaly Klitshchko ordered to remove the last
remaining activists from the Maidan. The city itself is
enduring hard times. There is a crime wave amid upheaval
among police. The central heating was only turned on in
November, while its price tripled. The economy is about to
grind to a halt, while foreign credit offered by IMF would
require the government to take painful reforms and cut
social spending.
25
Kiev mayor Vitaly Klitschko takes part in clearing barricades on Independence Square (Maidan).
(RIA Novosti / Alexandr Maksimenko)
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Schlußbemerkung: Die Faschisten, die dann immer
noch auf dem Maidan herumhängen, werden, wenn
der Kuchen im Sinne der EUSA verteilt und die Beute
gemacht ist – abgeräumt. Wenn sie es bis dahin nicht
geschnallt haben, dass die Party vorbei ist. (Siehe Bild
oben).
Und auch diese Damen und Herren sind dann
eigentlich Staffage – damit das Treiben des „harten
Kerns“ nicht so auffällt – und die Westmedien von
einem „Volksaufstand“ faseln können – man beachte
auch: die Kirche ist mal wieder ganz vorne mit dabei.
26
Quelle: http://rt.com/news/207223-maidan-protest-anniversary-highlights/
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Mark Seibert (mit der WELT die LINKE säubern) gewinnt Revision ./. HaBE Bitte(t) um Spenden !
Veröffentlicht am 2. Juli 2014 von Hartmut Barth-Engelbart http://www.barth-engelbart.de/?p=11233
Schaffen Mombach-SPRINGERS “Ruhrbarone” jetzt bei der LINKEn, was den Kohlebaronen mit ihrem Hugenberg einst bei und mit der SPD gelang?
Das Revisionsverfahren in der Sache Mark Seibert (wohl immer noch Internetbeauftragter des Bundesvorstandes & Assistent des Bundesschatzmeisters der LINKEn) gegen Hartmut Barth-Engelbart HaBE ich vor dem Berliner Kammergericht verloren. Die Veröffentlichung der Recherche-Ergebnisse zur geschäftlich-politischen Karriere des Chefs des gescheiterten (GEW-geförderten)„Gute Quelle“-Berufsschüler-Kneipen-Projekts in Gelnhausen, PDS-Wahlkampfleiter in Hessen, BAK-Shalom-Mitgründers, GAZA-Bombardierungs-Befürworters & jungeWelt-Boykott-Mitorganisators hat mir eine Reihe von Abmahnungen eingebracht & erhebliche Kosten, die ich mit meiner berufsverbotsbedingt halbierten Rente/Pension nicht alleine schultern kann.
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