Ukraine gets more support promises on the ninetieth anniversary of famine

Ukraine gets more support promises on the ninetieth anniversary of famine

Ukraine obtained more promises of support in the face of Moscow on Saturday, on the ninetieth anniversary of the “Holudomor” famine that the West says that the Stalinist regime was deliberately caused in the 1930s and has become a greater resonance since the Russian World War.
Ukrainian President Folodimir Zellinski stressed that his people will stand up to Russian attacks that cause a major interruption in electricity and water with the advent of winter.

“The Ukrainians have gone through terrible matters. Despite everything they kept the ability to obey and love freedom. In the past they wanted to destroy us with hunger and today with darkness and cold,” Zellinski said in a video clip on the Telegram application.
“We cannot be broken. ”
A number of European leaders went to Kyiv Saturday to commemorate the famine that Ukraine considers “genocide”.

Media in Poland and Lithuania has reported that the heads of the two governments of the two countries that support Kyiv Matosh Movitski and Ergida Simonte will hold talks in the Ukrainian capital, which are supposed to focus in particular on a possible new wave of Ukrainian immigration to Europe this winter.
The Ukrainian border guards confirmed that Movitski “visited Kyiv and participated in honoring the victims of the major famine.


Belgian Prime Minister Alexander de Crowe went to Kyiv on his first visit to Ukraine since the beginning of the Russian -Ukrainian war. The Belgian News Agency (Belga) reported that it carries an additional financial support with a value of 37. 4 million euros for Ukraine.
“We got to Kyiv. After the violent shelling in the past few days, we stand by the Ukrainian people. Today more than ever,” he wrote on Twitter.

German Chancellor Olaf Schultz announced in a video of an additional assistance of ten million euros to support the exports of Ukrainian grain affected by the war.
On Wednesday, the German parliament adopted a draft resolution that considered the famine caused by the Joseph Stalin regime in Ukraine ninety years ago, “genocide”, a collective crime that resonated again since the Russian -Ukrainian war.

This famine, which Ukraine commemorates on the fourth day of Sunday of November, falls on “the list of human crimes committed by totalitarian regimes that caused the elimination of millions of human lives in Europe, especially in the first half of the twentieth century,” according to the text of the decision.

Russia categorically rejects this characteristic, stressing that the great famine that struck the Soviet Union in the early thirties of the last century was not only the Ukrainian victims, but from the Russians, the Kazakhis, the Germans of Volga and members of other peoples..

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