Daily Slave
September 14, 2014
Vitali Klitschko, the Jewish boxer who became Kiev’s mayor following the Jewish-financed revolution in Ukraine earlier this year, is seeking financing for German help to construct a wall along Ukraine’s eastern border.
There is no denying the quality of German engineering. They are a very organized and structured group of people. It is just funny that we see a Jew seeking German help to build a security wall considering the sorry history of the Berlin Wall that divided the German people throughout the Cold War era.
The construction of a barrier between Ukraine and Russia has also been supported by Ukraine’s Jewish Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk.
The Germans should flat out refuse this request considering what Jews have done to their country over the past 100 years.
Kiev‘s mayor on Friday asked for funding and “know-how” from Germany to support the construction of a wall along Ukraine‘s eastern border to prevent Russian infiltration.
The appeal – made during a speech by Vitali Klitschko at Berlin‘s Christian Democrat-affiliated Konrad Adenauer Stiftung – raised eyebrows in Germany, where the Wall that once separated East Germany from the West remains highly controversial.
“We would be really delighted to receive support for this from all Ukraine‘s friends,” said Klitschko, a former boxer who once resided in Germany.
He said the fortifications were required to cut off Russian reinforcements to rebels in the form of weapons and fighters, adding that financing or assistance in the form of “know-how” from Germany would be welcome.
The news comes after Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk earlier this month announced a project to build a barrier along the border with Russia.
Later Friday, a Klitschko spokesman backpedalled, saying: “He didn‘t express himself correctly. It was because his German is quite bad.”
“The decision to secure its borders is Ukraine‘s free decision,” said Christine Wirtz, a spokeswoman for Chancellor Angela Merkel. “It‘s understandable.”
Christiane Wirtz said there had been no request to the German government to support the project, and there were no such plans in place.