Anger over businesssa banners in an official ceremony was not new

Anger over businesssa banners in an official ceremony was not new

Anger over businesssa banners in an official ceremony was not new. At the time there was no direct evidence of the existence of these banners, no actual evidence,골드 카지노 just more speculation about who was behind the banners, and what라이브카지노 they were intended to do. Now there is.

But we are not in the presence of either government nor the opposition here, and that is the purpose of this story; we are in the middle of a street in central Kiev where the Ukrainian people are standing in front of a statue of Tsar Alexander III, which has recently been vandalised with anti-Semitic comments. The statue of the former Tsar Alexander III is a symbol of Ukraine's independence and sovereignty, and was unveiled before the last parliamentary elections in 2015. It has since been vandalised with a sign saying: "We don't want foreign powers here", to which protesters have said they would like to give money to pay it to the local state oil company to be turned into a museum.

When I arrived at the place where I came across the statue, they were busy, with hundreds of people inside waiting to speak to me, some with small children. As they approached I noticed a large group of Ukrainians passing by without their shirts off. It seems it would be easy to spot the group from the crowd passing by - it was also very peaceful. They were clearly waiting for their government to give a statement. When their government refused to do so, they turned their attention to a statue of Ukraine's last independent king. On its face it looks like any other statue in Kiev, but there was something strange about the statue's head and the statue's face was so closely aligned.

The statue was vandalised on Thursday afternoon, and then on Friday afternoon was still there. There are two interpr천안 출장 안마etations of why it was vandalised:

There is a group of protesters that want a statue of Tsar Alexander III destroyed

Troy Beedle (photo credit: Troy Beedle)

The statue is in fact about 80 years old and it would not have been vandalised at that time anyway, but now, after the statue had been vandalised for days, it has a new owner. I was told that the statue would go back to its rightful owner before being taken down. And, as it turned out, the group that is protesting the removal of the statue got their wish, because on Saturday evening the statue was removed from its place on the street.

Here is the sign that was put up in the early evening yesterday. It say

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