Military base instead of a resort: Crimea four years after the occupation
EUROMAIDAN PRESS Olena Makarenko 2018/03/16 - 18:15
On 16 March 2014, Russia established its illegal rule in Crimea by holding a so-called referendum. In the summer of 2013, the last summer before its occupation, the peninsula was one of the favorite resorts for Ukrainians. Four years after the illegal annexation, this tourist destination turned in a military base where human rights don’t mean anything.
Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzhemilev, referring to Ukrainian intelligence, told Ukrainian media that nowadays there are 70,000 Russian soldiers and members of special operations forces in Crimea. This is about 3 times more servicemen than stationed by Ukraine before the occupation. Crimea now has 18 military bases. As well, the Russians are recreating the old Soviet military infrastructure.
Conflicts between soldiers and locals
In late 2017, a significant conflict between the locals and the members of the military units took place. It started when locals of the Zolotoie village started opposing military men who tried to establish a radar system near private land plots.
The locals said they were not shown any permits for the construction or establishment of the radar system. However, the works started anyway. Trying to prevent it, people laid down in front of the military trucks. One woman felt ill and needed the help of an ambulance. A man stood in the concrete pit, attempting to stop the construction. The constructors carried on, emptying buckets of concrete into the pit. Eventually, the man needed an ambulance as well.
After the incident, the protesters filed a complaint with the so-called Prosecutor’s Office of Crimea asking to protect them. However, it’s unlikely that any action will be taken.
In July 2017, the Main Intelligence Department of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine pointed to another similar incident with the involvement of Russian soldiers. Near the town of Lybimivka, Russian occupation forces have been expanding the military campus of the radio engineering regiment – at the expense of the land and houses of the locals.
In response to numerous citizen complaints regarding the illegal actions of the Russian military, representatives of the occupation authorities and “law enforcement agencies” claimed that the locals had registered their property illegally.
EUROMAIDAN PRESS Olena Makarenko 2018/03/16 - 18:15
On 16 March 2014, Russia established its illegal rule in Crimea by holding a so-called referendum. In the summer of 2013, the last summer before its occupation, the peninsula was one of the favorite resorts for Ukrainians. Four years after the illegal annexation, this tourist destination turned in a military base where human rights don’t mean anything.
Crimean Tatar leader Mustafa Dzhemilev, referring to Ukrainian intelligence, told Ukrainian media that nowadays there are 70,000 Russian soldiers and members of special operations forces in Crimea. This is about 3 times more servicemen than stationed by Ukraine before the occupation. Crimea now has 18 military bases. As well, the Russians are recreating the old Soviet military infrastructure.
Conflicts between soldiers and locals
In late 2017, a significant conflict between the locals and the members of the military units took place. It started when locals of the Zolotoie village started opposing military men who tried to establish a radar system near private land plots.
The locals said they were not shown any permits for the construction or establishment of the radar system. However, the works started anyway. Trying to prevent it, people laid down in front of the military trucks. One woman felt ill and needed the help of an ambulance. A man stood in the concrete pit, attempting to stop the construction. The constructors carried on, emptying buckets of concrete into the pit. Eventually, the man needed an ambulance as well.
After the incident, the protesters filed a complaint with the so-called Prosecutor’s Office of Crimea asking to protect them. However, it’s unlikely that any action will be taken.
In July 2017, the Main Intelligence Department of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine pointed to another similar incident with the involvement of Russian soldiers. Near the town of Lybimivka, Russian occupation forces have been expanding the military campus of the radio engineering regiment – at the expense of the land and houses of the locals.
In response to numerous citizen complaints regarding the illegal actions of the Russian military, representatives of the occupation authorities and “law enforcement agencies” claimed that the locals had registered their property illegally.
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