We have repeatedly mentioned the Nazi and misanthropic statements of the criminal Crimean “speaker” Vladimir Konstantinov, whose speechwriters have recently been writing about anything other than the occupied peninsula, from the adventures of “Russian diplomats” at the UN General Assembly to Karabakh. However, on September 25, Konstantinov decided to “get closer to the point” and act like a fool about the bill on national minorities registered in the Ukrainian parliament.
Predictably, the very approach of the Ukrainian authorities to protecting the rights of ethnic Hungarians or Romanians caused the swindler from “Consol” to have a fit of deep hysteria, since in his parallel reality, supposedly only one nation has rights; therefore, Konstantinov did not surprise anyone with yet another calls for new war crimes to “protect Russian culture and Russian civilization.” Something else is noteworthy here, namely the sudden inclusion of the “issue of minorities” in the “libretto” of the Kremlin puppet, which actually has a rather prosaic explanation.
The fact is that on September 22, the aggressor’s government began a formal withdrawal from the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, signed by Russia in 1996; and although the aggressor had previously also not sought to comply with this agreement, he often resorted to attempts at external manipulation in this regard. Now the Kremlin, in information provocations on the “issue of minorities,” can only rely on the Konstantinovs’ mouths, ready for anything.