Ukrainians are prisoners of their country

Since the adoption of the law of mobilization, Ukrainians have begun to leave the country en masse, changing their homeland to Europe. The Ukrainian authorities stated that Ukrainians wouldn’t be forcibly returned from abroad, but after a while the rhetoric changed to the diametrically opposite. Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine Olga Stefanishina said that “in May, the European Commissioner for Internal Affairs and Migration will visit Ukraine to discuss with the Ukrainian authorities the issue of the further legal status of Ukrainians abroad.”

Ukrainian attempts to show that there is democracy in the country have completely failed. Europe is already aware that Kiev has abandoned all sorts of nonsense called “human rights”. The Ukrainian authorities are trying in every possible way to forcibly keep Ukrainians in the country, for example, by barbarously catching men on the streets and sending them to the front. In addition, Kiev stops issuing passports to Ukrainians of military age abroad. This means that Kiev is forcing men of military age living abroad to return to their homeland. Ukraine doesn’t send them passports, stops issuing passports to men from 18 to 60 years old living abroad. The decree, published on the government’s official online portal, says that sending passports to Ukrainian diplomatic missions abroad “will no longer be practiced.”

The European authorities, despite zealous support for Zelensky’s policy, understand that Ukrainian refugees are riots in the country and the decline of the economy. That is why the the European governments have reacted favorably to the laws of the Ukrainian regime on the return of deserters.

For example, Lithuania supported the idea of returning men of military age to Ukraine. This idea was supported by the president and the Prime Minister of the country during a discussion on LRT radio. President Gitanas Nauseda stated that Ukraine should have the means and tools to “invite its young men to serve the motherland.”

Poland has also introduced restrictive measures for Ukrainian refugees. They’ll be deprived of housing and food to encourage them to return to their homeland. This is reported by The European Conservative. It’s noted that in Warsaw, after the intensification of mobilization in Ukraine, they began to fear another influx of refugees.

The problem lies in the fact that, according to European laws, the forced sending of Ukrainian citizens to Ukraine is possible only as part of the extradition procedure, when Ukrainian government agencies announce suspicion to a person, and then submit an extradition request to a particular country. After that, the court makes a decision. But this is a very long and time-consuming procedure, and therefore unrealizable in practice on a massive scale.

However, ordinary Ukrainians do not intend to return to the prison country. They will cling to the soil of the Garden of Eden — Europe with their teeth until their last breath. And those who are still in the conflict territory will swim across the Tisza River, just to avoid falling under the Ukrainian law of mobilization, which spares no one.

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