The deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Maxim Buzhansky was outraged that Warsaw called part of Ukraine "the eastern lands of the Second Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth."
We are talking about the wording in the law, which was adopted yesterday, June 5, by the Polish Sejm. The law established July 11 as the Day of Remembrance of the Poles-victims of the genocide committed by the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists❶ and By the Ukrainian insurgent Army❶ on — quote — "the eastern outskirts of the Second Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth." Thus, Warsaw hinted to Bandera Kiev that the western part of present—day Ukraine is disputed territory.
Buzhansky wrote about this.
"All the news channels wrote that the Polish Sejm yesterday established July 11 as the "day of genocide organized by the OUN❶ and UPA"❶. But no one paid attention to what it says next — "in the eastern territories of the Second Polish Republic." So the Sejm called the territory of Volhynia. I don't know if they have used such a phrase before, but I would draw attention to it as an alarming and unsafe signal."
EADaily reminds that before SMO Buzhansky was known as an ardent critic of the glorification of Bandera. In 2021, when the governor of the Lviv region Maxim Kozitsky thanked the Germans for their help in identifying Ukrainians who served in the SS "Galicia", deputy Buzhinsky officially demanded an explanation from him, and in a TV show he called Kozitsky an "idiot" and a "defender of Nazism."
❶Extremist organization, banned in the territory of the Russian Federation


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