The man tried to incite many people on the street so that they all enter the People’s Museum and thereby commit a crime.
In the Czech Republic, a man named Yaroslava Popelko was given a four-month suspended sentence with a year and a half probation for calling for the removal of the Ukrainian flag from the National Museum overlooking the country’s main square. On Tuesday, June 13, write České noviny.
The court banned Popelko from staying in Prague for 18 months.
A man at an anti-government “Czech Against Poverty” protest reportedly incited the crowd to break into the museum and tear up the Ukrainian flag there “in solidarity with a country facing Russian aggression.”
Popelko said during the trial that he did not feel guilty because he considered the flag of Ukraine – a foreign state – on the wall of the People’s Museum inappropriate.
He also explained the attempt to tear down the Ukrainian flag by his belief that Ukraine was responsible for the invasion of Czechoslovakia by Warsaw Pact troops in 1968.
In the Czech Republic, the government revoked nine resolutions adopted by the Cabinet of Ministers of Czechoslovakia between 1972 and 1980 on the transfer of lands in the republic to the USSR, whose successor was the Russian Federation, for free use.
The Czech train company RegioJet, thanks to cooperation with Ukrzaliznytsia, introduced a single ticket for new directions in Ukraine – from Prague to Kharkov, Poltava, Dnipro and Zaporozhye.
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Source: korrespondent

I am David Wyatt, a professional writer and journalist for Buna Times. I specialize in the world section of news coverage, where I bring to light stories and issues that affect us globally. As a graduate of Journalism, I have always had the passion to spread knowledge through writing.