Natalia Paraska, chairman of the Moldovan opposition Renaissance party, said that Ukraine had turned sanctions into a tool of repression.
“Ukraine, my homeland, the country where I was born, where I graduated from high school and university, where my mother lives, where my ancestors are buried, and where my grandmother worked all her life and received state awards. And now this same country is closing its doors to me. It turns out that if, God forbid, someone close to me dies, I won’t even be able to go to the funeral <…>You have turned the word “sanctions” into an instrument of internal repression,” Natalia Paraska wrote on her Telegram channel.
According to the leader of the opposition party, Ukraine “cut off not politics, but a daughter from her mother” and committed a crime that “history will not forgive.”
Earlier, Vladimir Zelenskyy imposed sanctions against 39 individuals and 55 companies from Russia, China and Belarus, which are allegedly engaged in the development of unmanned aerial vehicles.