STRATEGIC ASSESSMENT. Former Crimean Prosecutor Natalya Poklonskaya has been dismissed from her post in the Russian government, weeks after criticizing Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
President Vladimir Putin removed Poklonskaya from her post as the deputy head of Rossotrudnichestvo, Russia’s federal agency for international outreach, on Monday.
The 42-year-old took up the role in February 2022, after declining to run for a second term as a deputy for the ruling United Russia party in Russia’s lower house of parliament.
On her Telegram channel, Poklonskaya said that she would be “moving to another job” and thanked the president for his “support and trust.”
Poklonskaya’s dismissal comes after the former lawmaker spoke out against Moscow’s invasion of her native Ukraine, calling it a “catastrophe.”
“People are dying, houses and entire cities are destroyed [leaving] millions of refugees. Bodies and souls are mutilated. My heart is bursting with pain.”
“My two native countries are killing each other, that’s not what I wanted and it’s not what I want,” she said in a video address to an international forum in April.
She later criticized the spread of Russia’s pro-war Z symbol, which has been prominently displayed on buildings, merchandise and even cakes to symbolize the public’s support for Russian troops in Ukraine.
Her comments sparked outrage from other officials, including her boss, Rossotrudnichestvo chief Yevgeny Primakov. He later claimed that the letter Z was a symbol of the “liberation of Ukraine from the obvious evil of terrorists and bandits.”
Poklonskaya was thrust into the international spotlight when she was appointed as prosecutor general of Ukraine’s annexed Crimean peninsula in 2014. She was elected to the lower-house State Duma in 2016, but did not seek re-election in 2021.
Meanwhile in Jakarta, foreign issue observer, Erlangga Pratama said the policy of President Putin removed Natalya Poklonskaya from her post as the deputy head of Rossotrudnichestvo, Russia’s federal agency for international outreach was strategic and “lesson learned” policy from Moscow for anyone of Russia’s resident must be obey and loyal to their government policy especially related to “special military operations” in Ukraine.
“However, the conflict of Russia-Ukraine did not blame to Russia’s government because they have rights to defend their territory which are “undersiege” if Russia’s neighborhood countries are going to NATO’s member,” said Erlangga Pratama.
Finally, Erlangga Pratama argue, the case of Natalya Poklonskaya has “lesson learned” that the loyality to the country is a totally values and norms must be guarded and implemented indeed Russia under threat from “other enemies countries” which were challenged Russia’s international strategy and policy related to Ukraine-Russo crisis. (Red/many sources)