The China Mail - Ukraine's Russian speakers worry about being 'saved' by Putin

USD -
AED 3.6731
AFN 71.021929
ALL 86.757891
AMD 388.845938
ANG 1.80229
AOA 916.00013
ARS 1164.995901
AUD 1.563184
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.695628
BAM 1.718274
BBD 2.002838
BDT 121.45998
BGN 1.719885
BHD 0.376949
BIF 2973.111879
BMD 1
BND 1.309923
BOB 6.907155
BRL 5.620603
BSD 0.999627
BTN 85.145488
BWP 13.647565
BYN 3.271381
BYR 19600
BZD 2.008021
CAD 1.384205
CDF 2877.999668
CHF 0.82343
CLF 0.024644
CLP 945.690094
CNY 7.2695
CNH 7.26779
COP 4197
CRC 505.357119
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 96.873243
CZK 21.912502
DJF 178.012449
DKK 6.56327
DOP 58.908545
DZD 132.536245
EGP 50.806099
ERN 15
ETB 133.81045
EUR 0.879204
FJD 2.290499
FKP 0.746656
GBP 0.746705
GEL 2.74497
GGP 0.746656
GHS 14.294876
GIP 0.746656
GMD 71.501438
GNF 8658.065706
GTQ 7.698728
GYD 209.76244
HKD 7.757825
HNL 25.941268
HRK 6.627056
HTG 130.799
HUF 355.493505
IDR 16711.5
ILS 3.62415
IMP 0.746656
INR 85.23945
IQD 1309.571398
IRR 42100.000327
ISK 128.449891
JEP 0.746656
JMD 158.35182
JOD 0.709197
JPY 142.383503
KES 129.196076
KGS 87.449716
KHR 4001.774662
KMF 432.24966
KPW 900.101764
KRW 1428.525013
KWD 0.30626
KYD 0.833044
KZT 511.344318
LAK 21622.072771
LBP 89567.707899
LKR 299.446072
LRD 199.931473
LSL 18.549157
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.468994
MAD 9.272737
MDL 17.203829
MGA 4511.41031
MKD 54.139301
MMK 2099.785163
MNT 3572.381038
MOP 7.98763
MRU 39.575655
MUR 45.198647
MVR 15.39652
MWK 1733.40069
MXN 19.5658
MYR 4.315499
MZN 64.009882
NAD 18.549157
NGN 1601.520135
NIO 36.785022
NOK 10.381755
NPR 136.237321
NZD 1.68704
OMR 0.385003
PAB 0.999613
PEN 3.664973
PGK 4.141482
PHP 55.902622
PKR 280.826287
PLN 3.752184
PYG 8005.376746
QAR 3.644223
RON 4.377995
RSD 102.966435
RUB 81.997213
RWF 1428.979332
SAR 3.751083
SBD 8.361298
SCR 14.223739
SDG 600.500677
SEK 9.64578
SGD 1.307315
SHP 0.785843
SLE 22.75026
SLL 20969.483762
SOS 571.328164
SRD 36.849852
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.746876
SYP 13001.961096
SZL 18.542907
THB 33.415978
TJS 10.555936
TMT 3.51
TND 2.990231
TOP 2.342098
TRY 38.476596
TTD 6.782431
TWD 32.039744
TZS 2690.000086
UAH 41.530014
UGX 3663.550745
UYU 42.090559
UZS 12943.724275
VES 86.54811
VND 26005
VUV 121.306988
WST 2.770092
XAF 576.298184
XAG 0.030327
XAU 0.000302
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.71673
XOF 576.29312
XPF 104.776254
YER 245.050464
ZAR 18.56875
ZMK 9001.189716
ZMW 27.965227
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.1500

    10.01

    +1.5%

  • RBGPF

    -0.4500

    63

    -0.71%

  • BCC

    -0.8300

    94.5

    -0.88%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1300

    10.12

    -1.28%

  • NGG

    0.1900

    73.04

    +0.26%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.24

    -0.36%

  • RIO

    0.0100

    60.88

    +0.02%

  • GSK

    0.9100

    38.97

    +2.34%

  • BTI

    0.4700

    42.86

    +1.1%

  • BP

    -1.0600

    28.07

    -3.78%

  • JRI

    0.1300

    12.93

    +1.01%

  • CMSD

    -0.1300

    22.35

    -0.58%

  • RELX

    0.4300

    53.79

    +0.8%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    21.92

    +0.5%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.58

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    1.7800

    71.71

    +2.48%

Ukraine's Russian speakers worry about being 'saved' by Putin
Ukraine's Russian speakers worry about being 'saved' by Putin

Ukraine's Russian speakers worry about being 'saved' by Putin

Kyiv driving instructor Andriy Atamanyuk does not want to be saved by Vladimir Putin despite the Kremlin chief's pledge to fight "discrimination" against Russian speakers in Ukraine.

Text size:

"Never," the 48-year-old Ukrainian said in Russian. "There is no-one to save here. There is no discrimination. It is utter nonsense."

The treatment of ethnic Russians -- many of them living in Ukraine's industrial southeast -- has been an obsession for Putin ever since a pro-EU revolution pulled Kyiv out of Moscow's orbit in 2014.

But the issue has gained added attention as Putin tries to reverse NATO's post-Soviet expansion, sending more than 100,000 troops to Russia's border with Ukraine.

Analysts and some Western governments fear that Putin may use language and the perceived mistreatment of ethnic Russians as a pretext for launching an all-out war on Ukraine.

So does Atamanyuk.

"These fairy tales about the language are just an excuse to invade," he said. "There is nothing for Putin to see here."

- 'Native land' -

Ukrainian became the former Soviet republic's official language during Mikhail Gorbachev's embrace of democratic freedoms in 1989.

The collapse of the USSR two years later created economic mayhem on a scale so sweeping that politically sensitive issues such as language became trivial by comparison and were put aside.

But the Kremlin's March 2014 annexation of Crimea and the Moscow-backed revolt in Ukraine's east that broke out around the same time stirred up patriotic passions and reopened old fault lines.

The Western-backed government in Kyiv began to unroll legislation designed to promote Ukrainian on television and in the streets.

And the Kremlin started to grumble about the alleged persecution of ethnic Russians by a Kyiv administration that it casts, by turns, as a puppet of the US government and an offshoot of neo-Nazis.

Russians "are not being recognised as indigenous people on what is effectively their native land", Putin fumed earlier this month.

- 'Hybrid war' -

The latest rules require Russian-language publications to release Ukrainian editions of similar circulation and content.

The law particularly upsets Putin because it makes an exception for English-language media in Ukraine.

Human Rights Watch said the new law raises "concerns".

But the New York-based rights group also stressed that the "Ukrainian government has every right to promote its state language and strengthen its national identity".

Finding the difficult balance of doing this without provoking Putin has been something IT entrepreneur and philanthropist Yevgeniy Utkin has been mulling over for some time.

Utkin says he speaks Russian "out of principle, because I love it very much".

But this has not held him back from serving as an adviser for the Ukrainian government or appearing on political talk shows.

"I have never -- not once -- had a single incident related to me speaking Russian," Utkin said.

Yet he worries that any attempts to strengthen the Ukrainian language will be seized upon by Putin and provide added ammunition for the Kremlin media's unrelenting attacks on Kyiv.

"Language is simply another bullet in Russia’s hybrid war," said Utkin. "There is an information war being waged in our heads."

- Putin's essay -

The Kremlin's current standoff with the West escalated a few months after Putin penned a 7,000-word essay last July entitled "On the historical unity of Russians and Ukrainians".

"The formation of an ethnically pure Ukrainian state, aggressive towards Russia, is comparable in its consequences to the use of weapons of mass destruction against us," Putin said in the English version of the text.

The article was widely interpreted as Putin's defining argument for stripping Ukraine of its independence and subjecting it to Kremlin rule.

It has also been picked apart by historians as wildly inaccurate.

"Russian propaganda depends upon myths and counterfactuals, all spun in the direction of Russian greatness and innocence," Yale historian and author Timothy Snyder wrote.

Many leading thinkers in Ukraine believe that the two countries have drifted too far apart to be rejoined by force.

"Freedom is now in Ukrainians’ DNA. And the problem is that the Russian elite does not understand this," said Utkin.

Ukraine's bestselling Russian-language author Andrey Kurkov summed it up along similar lines.

Russians subscribe to a "collective mentality", he told AFP. "Ukrainians are individuals."

W.Cheng--ThChM