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New Years freak show! Thousands of Ukrainians march in Kiev in hopes of bringing back the dead spirit of WW2 Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera

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It’s like an episode of The Walking Dead.

Either Ukrainian nationalists are just looney tunes crazy, or Victoria Nuland laced her coup d’etat cookies with some funky strong LSD where people in Kiev now believe their WW2 Nazi idols will come back to life in some sort of messiah-like second coming.

What a creep show Ukraine has become.

Via AFP:

The march on what would have been Stepan Bandera’s 106th birthday moved along the same streets on which hundreds of thousands rallied for three months last winter before ousting a Moscow-backed president.

Some wore World War II-era army uniforms while others draped themselves in the red and black nationalist flags and chanted “Ukraine belongs to Ukrainians” and “Bandera will return and restore order”.

“The Kremlin is afraid of Bandera because he symbolises the very idea of a completely independent Ukraine,” Lidia Ushiy said while holding up a portrait of the far-right icon at the head of the march.

Bandera is a mythical but immensely divisive figure in Ukraine whom some compare to Cuba’s Che Guevara.

His movement’s slogan — “Glory to Ukraine! Glory to the heroes!” — was also the catchphrase of last year’s pro-European revolt.

As noted above, the marchers in Kiev are honouring what amounts to be a Pro-Nazi Ukrainian nationalist, chanting that he will return and set Ukraine free.

Western propaganda, and shoddy AFP reporting aside, Bandera is not a “mythical” figure. He was a very real and polarising person, who ordered the death of hundreds of thousands of Poles, Jews, and Russians during WW2.

So who is this Ukrainian nationalist messiah? Via Wikipedia:

Stepan Andriyovych Bandera was a Ukrainian political activist and leader of the Ukrainian nationalist and independence movement.

In 1934, he was arrested in Lwów (in Ukrainian, Lviv) by Polish authorities and was tried twice: for involvement in the assassination of the Polish minister of internal affairs, Bronisław Pieracki; and at a general trial of Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists executives. He was convicted of terrorism and sentenced to death, but the sentence was commuted to life imprisonment.

In September 1939, while Poland was being invaded, under unclear circumstances Bandera managed to get freed from prison and proceeded to work, with German support, for an uprising in the Kresy. These eastern Polish territories had a majority Ukrainian population, and went on to become modern Western Ukraine. At the same time, he tried to stoke unrest in the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic, modern Eastern Ukraine. His goal was to establish a unified Ukrainian state, composed of areas inhabited by ethnic Ukrainians, but that had been under the control of Poland and the Soviet Union.

On 30 June 1941, eight days after Germany’s attack on the Soviet Union, Bandera in Lviv proclaimed an independent Ukrainian state. His militant branch of the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) thought that, in their struggle against the Soviet Union, they had a powerful ally in Nazi Germany. But the Germans arrested the newly formed Ukrainian government and sent them to concentration camps in Germany. Bandera was imprisoned by the Nazis until September 1944.

At that juncture, with the war going very badly against Germany, Bandera was released in the hope that he would fight the advancing Soviet forces. He established his headquarters in Berlin and received German financial, material, and personnel support for his Ukrainian Insurgent Army.

After the war, in 1959, in Munich, Germany, Bandera was assassinated by the Soviet KGB (secret police).

Assessments of his work have ranged from totally apologetic to sharply negative. On 22 January 2010, the outgoing President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko awarded Bandera the posthumous title of Hero of Ukraine. The award was condemned by European Parliament, Russian, Polish and Jewish organizations and was declared illegal by the following Ukrainian government and a court decision in April 2010. In January 2011, the award was officially annulled.

Stepan Bandera remains a controversial figure today both in Ukraine and internationally.

American and European leaders are supporting a real bunch of winners in Ukraine.

References:

http://news.yahoo.com/thousands-ukraine-nationalists-march-kiev-193807371.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stepan_Bandera

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of this site. This site does not give financial, investment or medical advice.

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PavicL
January 2, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: New Years freak show! Ukrainians march in Kiev in hope of bringing back dead spirit of WW2 Nazi hero Bandera http://t.co/…

lucma66
January 2, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: New Years freak show! Ukrainians march in Kiev in hope of bringing back dead spirit of WW2 Nazi hero Bandera http://t.co/…

JamieK_UNB
January 3, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: New Years freak show! Ukrainians march in Kiev in hope of bringing back dead spirit of WW2 Nazi hero Bandera http://t.co/…

nightfever
January 3, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: New Years freak show! Ukrainians march in Kiev in hope of bringing back dead spirit of WW2 Nazi hero Bandera http://t.co/…

CanopusArchives
January 5, 2015

RT @redpilltimes: New Years freak show! Ukrainians march in Kiev in hope of bringing back dead spirit of WW2 Nazi hero Bandera http://t.co/…

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