In an open letter to the Guardian’s editor, Natalia Galibarenko, Ambassador of Ukraine to the UK, expressed deep concern about the way the situation in Ukraine was described in a piece titled “Henry Marsh: 'Ukraine is like a Trabant that wants to be a Ferrari’,” published November 26, 2017.
While the article is supposed to tell the audience about the healthcare system of Ukraine within the framework of a touching story of the British neurosurgeon Henry Marsh and his assistance to the Ukrainian colleagues, its red line, Ambassador Galibarenko says, “turned out to be a mixture of the Russian propaganda slogans which the Kremlin is spreading extensively in the Western societies as an instrument of its dirty propaganda”.
Criticizing the claim of “civil war” in Ukraine, the envoy said: “Let me be clear: there is no civil war in Ukraine. The whole civilized world, including all the leading international organizations, namely UN, OSCE and Council of Europe, has already acknowledged that there is the Kremlin’s wide scale military aggression in Eastern Ukraine which started in 2014. It was also clearly stated in the 2016 annual report of the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court.”
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Regarding the “country torn apart by the Euromaidan conflict of 2013”, Galibarenko said that Ukraine and its Western partners had “immediately rebuffed the Russian-orchestrated campaign naming events in Ukraine’s capital in 2013 as ‘Euromaidan conflict or ‘coup d'etat’.” “It was a Revolution of Dignity which showed an unprecedented rise of patriotism among Ukrainians who united against tyranny and authoritarianism and bringing Ukraine again back under the Russian umbrella,” the diplomat stressed.
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Regarding the poverty and corruption, the ambassador admitted that Ukraine certainly had its homework to do in order to achieve further progress on reforms, including on the national healthcare system.
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