Winter is near: How will IDPs fare in the west of Ukraine?
October 14, 2022 - Ivanna Rudishyn
October 14, 2022 - Ivanna Rudishyn
July 27, 2022 - Andriy Sadovyi Nikodem Szczygłowski
In February 2014 troops lacking military insignia invaded Crimea and swiftly took over key military and strategic sites. A referendum was hastily organised, even though it violated Ukrainian law and international norms. The Russian press claimed that 97 per cent of those who voted were in favour of annexation and 83 per cent of the electorate had turned out. While these figures were cited by international news media sources, a report by the President of Russia’s Council on Civil Society and Human Rights (that was posted at the president-sovet.ru web site) showed that only between 15-30 per cent of Crimean citizens voted for unification with Russia. With the bogus referendum swept under the rug, a treaty was signed between the newly proclaimed Republic of Crimea and the Russian Federation to initiate a process of integration.
July 24, 2017 - Greta Uehling