According to the parliamentarian, as experience in recent years shows, the Ukrainian government creates “sand castles” on paper, which it later refutes

“You do not need to invent a bicycle: there are Minsk agreements, and this is the best road map for Ukraine to establish peace in the Donbass, and all these concepts are political cunning,” he said.

Balbek also emphasized that if we talk about Crimea, then his fate was decided in 2014.

“To make plans for the Russian peninsula is to deceive ourselves,” the deputy concluded.

Earlier, the first deputy “representative of the president in Crimea” Daria Sviridova announced the development of a draft concept of a national model of “transitional justice”.

In August, the deputy head of the office of the Ukrainian leader, Ruslan Ryaboshapka, wrote on his Facebook page about the need to develop a strategy for the “reintegration of Crimea and Donbass.” He also spoke about plans to prepare the concept of “transitional justice”.

Crimea became the Russian region after a referendum held in March 2014, at which most residents spoke out for reunification with Russia.