Putin will give a solution to the Rohingya crisis: Crimea's Prime Minister

in #esteem7 years ago

image

Sergei Aksanov is the new hero of Crimea. The 2014 referendum referendum program, under which Crimea has been included in Russia, has played the role of one of its catalysts. April 24th. At the Prime Minister's headquarters, he had the first light question, that the upper house of the Chechnya Parliament sent delegation to Bangladesh to see the sufferings of the Rohingya refugees. Whether you have a plan to send such a team from your republic. In the north Sergei Aksanov did not go to the point of sending the Chechnya delegation. But he said that the Russian Foreign Ministry has been keeping an eye on the crisis that Rohingya Muslim refugees have faced. They have been briefing about Myanmar from time to time.

In this context, he said, "The issue of the Rohingya issue is reserved for Russian Foreign Ministry and Russian President has the exclusive right to deal with it. I'm sure he (Putin) will find a fair solution for this crisis. The last comment of Aksionov was that when people are persecuted in their religion and caste, it is a matter of regret. I am sorry for the Rohingyas.

Crimea is a name in history. From 1853 to 1856, more than a dozen operated Crimean wars had stirred the world. On one side was the Russian Empire, on the other hand the Ottoman Empire, France and Britain's allies. Russia has lost. After several ups and downs, in the year 2014, Aksanov was seen as the hero to bring Crimea back to Russia's flag. Since 2014, he is the chairman of all the ministries of provincial government. He is called 'Head of the Republic'. In 2003, he received Russian citizenship as a resident of Moldova. In 2008, was a member of the Russian Community of Crimea. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Crimea was an autonomous region under the independent Ukraine. At the end of two years of being a deputy of the Supreme Council of Crimea, in 2010, he expressed his intention to join Russia in a TV interview. In the 2014 referendum, Crimea got more than 90 percent of the vote in favor of joining Russia. But the Western world did not accept this convergence. The restrictions that they have imposed on this issue are still in force.

The Crimea Prime Minister also said, "Russia is officially a secular state. Government and religious institutions are separated by the constitution. We have an intermediate council. There are people of all religions here. There are two large religions followers. About 80 percent of people are Orthodox Christians. And Muslims are around 10 percent. Religious followers living in Crimea maintain mutual respect. Without peace or conflict, they are living peacefully. I can assure that there will be no religious conflict in Crimea. If I find any type of hat-talk or any kind of violence, I'll face it very hard. '