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Crimea: 10 years on, fight to liberate peninsula continues

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Deutsche Welle :
When Russia illegally annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea in 2014, tens of thousands of people fled the southern peninsula. Some of these exiles joined Ukraine’s armed forces in the fight against Russia, including Isa Akayev and Iryna Holosna.
Akayev, whose real name is Nariman Bilyalov, is the commander of Ukraine’s Crimea battalion, which he founded together with other Crimeans. The small unit is dominated by Crimean Tatars, the Muslim Turkic group indigenous to the region. Today, the battalion forms a special unit within Ukraine’s military intelligence service.
Akayev sees parallels between Russia’s 2014 occupation of Crimea and the time when Soviet authorities deported scores of Crimean Tatars to Central Asia at the end of World War II. In 1944 his parents, who were still children at the time, and his grandparents were sent by the Soviets from Crimea to the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, where they lived for 40 years.
Akayev and his sisters were born there, although their parents told them that one day they would return to Crimea, their true home. This only became possible in 1990, as the Soviet Union began collapsing.
It was a historic moment, Akayev told DW. He realized then that Crimea would have to gain support from newly independent Ukraine to build its future. “We can’t be part of Russia, the Russians have taken everything from us,” Akayev said, who added that Russia even destroyed Crimean Tatar cemeteries and mosques.
In the winter of 2014, Russian soldiers carrying Russian weapons and wearing Russian military uniforms – but without identifying insignia – first appeared in Crimea. They took control of administrative buildings and military facilities.

At the time, Crimeans didn’t believe this would lead to the occupation of the entire peninsula, Akayev said. They were sure the success of the pro-European protest movement against the then Russian-backed government in Kyiv meant that pro-Russian forces wouldn’t prevail.
Akayev recalled the major protests that he attended in Simferopol, Crimea’s capital, on February 26, 2014. The demonstrations against the Russian presence were organized by the Mejlis, the highest executive-representative body of the Crimean Tatar People.
Yet pro-Russian rallies also took place at the time, leading to violent clashes with anti-Russian protesters. Soon after, Akayev left the peninsula and traveled to the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, where he appealed for support for the people of Crimea.
It was only after a call from his wife, in which she told him that unfamiliar people were waiting outside the house and warned him not to travel home, that he realized he wouldn’t be to return. A few days later, Akayev’s wife and children fled the peninsula as well.
Iryna Holosna is a pro-Ukrainian Crimean who initially stayed on the peninsula after Russia’s annexation to resist the occupiers. She has lived in Sevastopol, Crimea’s largest city, since the 1990s and said Russian narratives about the history of Crimea were circulating well before annexation.
Crimeans were offered Russian citizenship when Ukraine’s pro-Russian President Viktor Yanukovych governed the country from 2010 to 2014. They were told these passports would provide them with great opportunities and jobs in Russia, Holosna said. But Crimeans didn’t perceive this offer as a threat, Holosna added.

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