USD
41.64 UAH ▼0.46%
EUR
48.78 UAH ▲1.19%
GBP
57.2 UAH ▲1.29%
PLN
11.51 UAH ▲1.79%
CZK
1.97 UAH ▲1.47%
To spread: a member of the National Education Agency for Education Lydia Fesenko...

"Grabbed her hair": in Ivano-Frankivsk, through Russian music, a woman attacked another (video)

To spread: a member of the National Education Agency for Education Lydia Fesenko was beaten in Snyatyn in Ivano-Frankivsk. Another woman was attacking the woman while staying at a local cafe: the reason was that the attacker was angered by Fesenko's request not to turn on Russian music. The incident in Ivano-Frankivsk was told by Lydia Fesenko on her Facebook page on March 28.

She reported that the establishment where the conflict happened, went to meet her and fully supported her, so she provided a video from the surveillance cameras, which shows a clash. Fesenko also described the situation in the post. She confessed that she came to Ivano-Frankivsk to visit her girlfriend, and together they visited the local catering establishment.

"Situation: Lunch, Snyatyn, Ivano-Frankivsk region, at the next table are ladies that include Russian music, instead I make remarks," she said. After that, according to the victim, there was a "linguistic altercation" between the parties to the conflict. Lydia, along with her girlfriends, according to her, was offended for some time and then actively sat and discussed. After 30 minutes, the company where the attacker was completed and went to the release.

"The ladies are going to leave the establishment, and one heroine decides to grab me for her hair and pull me," Lydia writes. Also, according to the victim, the attacker spoke about the Russian -speaking Ukrainian military during the conversation and criticized them. "It is worth noting that in all circumstances, the lady came to the Russian -speaking military," Fesenko said. The institution in which the conflict happened not only provided video, but also helped to provide police testimony.

In the department, according to the public, they soon identified the identity of the attacker-it turned out that he was a 39-year-old resident of Snyatyn. The actions of the attacker are likely to qualify under Article 173 of the Code of Administrative Offenses (about petty hooliganism), as Lydia Fesenko himself wrote after a while. Due to the lack of injuries that can qualify forensic examination, actions cannot be qualified under another article.