Sentsov in NYC:
Opposition to Russia
Continues due to
Putin’s Aggression
Former Ukrainian political prisoner Oleg Sentsov addresses Ukrainian Americans in New York City.
Despite torrential rain last Saturday, several hundred Ukrainian
Americans filled the hall in the Ukrainian National Home in New York City to
hear a former Ukrainian political prisoner divert the free world’s attention from
fake Ukrainian-leading topics to real issues pertaining to Ukraine — how to
persevere and survive in the face of Russia’s unrelenting war.
Oleg Sentsov, a 43-year-old cinematographer from today’s Russian-occupied
Crimea, was released on September 7, 2019, after spending some five years in
the still active polar network of infamous Russian concentration camps for
opposing Vladimir Putin’s aggression against his homeland.
The soft-spoken but still fiercely dogged Ukrainian patriot,
Sentsov told the supportive audience at the assembly that was organized by the
contemporary Ukrainian NGO Razom that Putin’s imperial policies compel
Ukrainians to continue their opposition.
With Ukraine continuously dragged into hopeless Minsk negotiations
about returning peace to Ukraine and the region, Sentsov pointed out their broad
unreliability, emphasizing that nothing positive for Ukraine will be
forthcoming. The reason is Putin’s dishonesty and belligerent intentions, he said.
Ukraine and its allies cannot negotiate in good faith with
Putin’s Russia because the achievement of peace is impossible, Sentsov
elaborated in halting Ukrainian. He clearly accentuated that peace is not Putin’s
goal but rather he intends to destroy Ukrainian independence and return Ukraine
to its previous colonial existence in Russia’s prison of nations.
Ukraine cannot give in to Russia so our opposition continues,
he emphasized.
Sentsov was sentenced on August 25, 2015, to 20 years
imprisonment on trumped up charges of setting up a branch of a “terrorist group”
and organizing “terrorist acts” in April 2014. In reality, his crime in the
eyes of Moscow was to fervently oppose Russia’s invasion and occupation of
Crimea and its persecution of Crimean Tatars and others. His conviction in a
military court in Russia followed a grossly unfair trial, on
politically-motivated charges, and was based on “confessions” obtained through
torture. During his arrest by the Russian State Security (FSB), he was tortured
by FSB by putting a plastic bag over his head until he passed out. They also
threatened him with rape and murder, which forced Sentsov to “confess” to
organizing explosions, acts of terrorism, and illegal possession of firearms.
He became the subject of a global defense campaign and
earned the support of Amnesty International and PEN. On May 14, 2018, Sentsov
declared an indefinite hunger strike until all Ukrainian political prisoners
were released in Russia. Sentsov ended his hunger strike after 145 days, citing
the “critical state of his health” and the impending threat of hospitalization
and force-feeding. He lost more than 30 kg. Two weeks later, on October 25,
2018, Sentsov was awarded the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought from the
European Parliament.
Sentsov was ultimately freed last year and flown along with
34 other freed prisoners to Kyiv on Sept. 7. Some 300 remain in Russian
prisons, he reminded the crowd.
In his first appearance in Lviv, Sentsov was quoted by The
New York Times as calling Putin’s mission to make Russia great again by embracing
the corpse of Soviet power “political necrophilia.” He also said at the time “By
blood and language, I am totally Russian. By birth, I am Crimean. But by
spirit, I am Ukrainian. That is the most important.”
At yesterday’s rally, Sentsov said the Revolution of Dignity
on Maidan was an epiphany for many Ukrainians who took to heart massive
national insurrection’s historical importance. Russia’s invasion of Crimea and
eastern Ukraine showed Russia’s true face, he said. Consequently, he and
millions of others in Ukraine understood that they were Ukrainians.
He recalled that on Maidan the fighters comprehended that
they were fighting for Ukraine under the Ukrainian flag for the future of their
country.
The emotions and passions that gelled as a result of Maidan
led Sentsov to believe that Russia will never defeat Ukraine. This is our
country and we have to fight for it, he said.
Despite current critical opinions about President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy, Sentsov noted that he doesn’t enjoy the favor of the Russian
president. Putin, he said, would rather see as president of Ukraine someone
like Viktor Medvechuk, a known supporter of the Russian leader’s policies.
The Russo-Ukraine War of 2014-2020 is taking its toll on the
nation, as Sentsov pointed out that the costly battle is getting deadlier. The
price for safeguarding Ukrainian independence and freedom is steep. He said
some 14,000 Ukrainians have paid the price with their lives for defending their
country.
However, returning to his earlier affirmation, Sentsov
pointed out that the free world, NATO, the European Union and the United States
will never really get involved in this battle. They don’t want to help. So,
Ukrainians are left to help themselves, echoing the mantra of Irish
revolutionaries and freedom fighters “sinn fein.”
As for the mission beyond the borders of Ukraine, he urged Ukrainians
to continue what they’re doing for their families and Ukraine to prevail
against Russian aggression, he urged.
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