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[[Party of Regions]] and Bulgarian minority leader in the Budjak, [[Anton Kisse]], have been denying any connection to the movement and even rejected it.
[[Party of Regions]] and Bulgarian minority leader in the Budjak, [[Anton Kisse]], have been denying any connection to the movement and even rejected it.


There have been some speculation{{by whom?|date=May 2019}} that the organisation sought to ultimately create a "Bessarabian People's Republic" and link with separatists in [[Moldova]]'s [[Gagauzia]] and [[Transnistria]]. However, the lack of a land connection between [[Budjak]] and the latter was crucial in the project's demise.<ref>[https://www.icds.ee/fileadmin/media/icds.ee/failid/Emmet_Tuohy_-_Separatism_and_Hybrid_Warfare_in_Southern_Bessarabia.pdf]</ref>
There have been some speculation{{by whom?|date=April 2019}} that the organisation sought to ultimately create a "Bessarabian People's Republic" and link with separatists in [[Moldova]]'s [[Gagauzia]] and [[Transnistria]]. However, the lack of a land connection between [[Budjak]] and the latter was crucial in the project's demise.<ref>[https://www.icds.ee/fileadmin/media/icds.ee/failid/Emmet_Tuohy_-_Separatism_and_Hybrid_Warfare_in_Southern_Bessarabia.pdf]</ref>


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 11:46, 2 April 2019

The National Council of Bessarabia was a separatist organisation was headed by Dmitriy Zatuliveter, of the previously obscure Organization of Transnistrians in Ukraine. It arose in 2014, following the Russian military intervention in Ukraine.

Overview

The group released a manifesto on a Russian-registered website in which it decried "discrimination" against ethnic minorities in the region, and called for far greater autonomy in the Budjak region [1] even while nominally rejecting separatism. Ukrainian authorities took swift action, with the SBU making two dozen arrests. This led one Ukrainian site to claim that the movement had been "smothered in its cradle".[2]

Party of Regions and Bulgarian minority leader in the Budjak, Anton Kisse, have been denying any connection to the movement and even rejected it.

There have been some speculation[by whom?] that the organisation sought to ultimately create a "Bessarabian People's Republic" and link with separatists in Moldova's Gagauzia and Transnistria. However, the lack of a land connection between Budjak and the latter was crucial in the project's demise.[3]

See also

References