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Crimean Authorities Set to Sue Kiev for Violating Rights of Region’s Residents

© Sputnik / Sergey Malgavko / Go to the mediabankThe Black Sea coast and Mount Ayu-Dag in Gurzuf.
The Black Sea coast and Mount Ayu-Dag in Gurzuf. - Sputnik International
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Crimea has started collecting facts of human rights violations committed by Ukrainian officials against the peninsula’s residents, preparing to file a lawsuit against Kiev, Crimean Deputy Prime Minister Georgy Muradov said on Wednesday.

SIMFEROPOL (Sputnik) — Speaking during a Moscow-Simferopol video conference, Muradov said the Crimean officials "need to gather all these facts and file respective lawsuits against nationalist Ukrainian authorities," adding that foreign lawyers will help them.

Such cases as restrictions for Crimean residents traveling abroad, as well as shutting off water supplies through the North-Crimean Canal will be included in the lawsuits, Muradov specified.

On Monday, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Office (OHCHR) released a report on human rights violations in Crimea committed by Ukraine and allegedly by Russia. The report stated that the right of the Crimean population to "an adequate standard of living" has been violated by Kiev interrupting water and energy supplies to the peninsula, among other things.

View of the St. Nicholas the Wonder Worker church/light house in the village of Malorechenskoye in the Crimea's Sudak District. - Sputnik International
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The report also provided 20 recommendations to Moscow on ways to improve the situation with human rights in the region, as well as some suggestions to the Ukrainian authorities. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that Kremlin has not yet read the report, while Ruslan Balbek, a Russian lawmaker representing Crimea in the State Duma, called the report "a scrap of paper."

Crimea rejoined Russia in 2014 when 97 percent of the peninsula's residents voted in favor of the move in a referendum. Despite this, the reunification was not recognized by the majority of the Western countries including the European Union which subsequently imposed the economic and political sanctions on Moscow in relation to the move. Moscow has repeatedly said that the referendum on rejoining Russia was conducted by Crimea in compliance with the international law.

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