Ukrainian court nullifies naming of Kyiv streets for radical Ukrainian nationalists
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                  Euroasian Jewish News

                  Ukrainian court nullifies naming of Kyiv streets for radical Ukrainian nationalists

                  A statue of Stepan Bandera in Lviv. (Courtesy of Andrey Syasko)

                  Ukrainian court nullifies naming of Kyiv streets for radical Ukrainian nationalists

                  01.07.2019, Ukraine

                  A court in Ukraine issued an injunction against the naming of two streets in Kyiv after nationalists who collaborated with the Nazis during World War II.

                  The district administrative court of Kyiv on Tuesday issued the injunction, ordering the municipality to reverse the 2016 renaming of two main streets for Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych. But Mayor Vitaly Klitschko on Wednesday wrote on Facebook that the municipality will appeal the ruling, the Regnum news agency reported. In the meantime, the streets in question will be renamed Moscow Avenue and another avenue named for Nikolai Vatutin, a Soviet general who was killed in 1944 by militiamen from Shukhevych’s Ukrainian Insurgent Army, or UPA.

                  Despite protests by Jews, this glorification became mainstream following the 2014 overthrow of the government of former president Viktor Yanukovych, whose critics call him a corrupt Russian stooge. It ushered in a wave of nationalist sentiment.

                  In 2015, a law passed making it illegal to insult the memory of any anti-Soviet fighter.

                  By Cnaan Lipshitz

                  JTA