Ukrainians force themselves to speak Ukrainian (to inform the whole world that they are a separate nation)

Two recent events. One: Ukrainian parliament passed a law imposing the use of the Ukrainian language. Two: almost concurrently Moscow introduced a law within the meaning of which residents of the Luhansk and Donetsk People’s Republics may apply for Russian citizenship.

The law on language makes it mandatory that Ukrainian be spoken in all public places, that 90% of TV output and at least 50% of printed publications be in this language. An observant reader – without further research – will have noticed that at present not even 50% of books are available in Ukrainian. To make things even funnier, the president-elect – Volodymyr Zelenskiy – is a native speaker of Russian and it was Russian which was used almost exclusively in the first season of the TV series in which he played the main role, the role which catapulted him to the presidency. Ukrainian national identity must be in deep trouble if it has to be propped up by such laws.

Imagine a similar law being passed in any of the European Union member states, a law imposing one language and ousting another. What a howl of indignation would be raised with the ready gamut of wild accusations of nationalism, Nazism and chauvinism. Yet, in the case of Ukraine, no one has raised a brow.

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Free Trade Agreement between Bosnia and Turkey signed in Ankara

Economic co-operation between BiH and Turkey were being discussed and that the growth of the two countries’ trade exchanges was established. Dodik thanked Erdogan for finalizing the Trade Exchange Agreement. “The agreement allows us to encourage the cooperation of the two countries and the economic growth of BiH, and I am glad that today we have signed an agreement for the construction of the Belgrade-Sarajevo highway,” Dodik said, News Agency Partia reports. Source: Sarajevo Times