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  1. 2014: Some Moments of the Kharkiv Spring is a non-fiction book by the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine (2014–2021) Arsen Avakov, published in 2020 by Kharkiv-based Folio Publishing House. The author, speaking from a first-person perspective, recounts the takeover of the Kharkiv Regional State Administration building by pro ...

  2. There was one night in the troubled spring of the dramatic year 2014 that saved Kharkiv from the tragic fate of Donetsk, Luhansk, and many Donbas towns and villages, which endure now the seventh year of devastation by hands of separatists and Russian mercenaries.

  3. library.kpi.kharkov.ua › files › new_postupleniyaARSEN AVAKOV 2014

    A18 2014: Some Moments of the Kharkiv Spring / Arsen Avakov; translation A. Korotaev; graphic artist O. Huhalova-Mieshko­ va. — Kharkiv: Folio, 2021. 286 p.; ill. ISBN 978-966-03-9601-2. The one night of the troubled spring of the dramatic year 2014 that saved Kharkiv from the tragic fate of Donetsk, Luhansk, many

  4. The distinctive feature of this book is that the reader can listen to the audio recording of the separatists' conversations using included QR codes. The book comprises undeniable and shocking evidence of criminal plans to capture Kharkiv and other large cities, to kill people, and to ruin Ukraine.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arsen_AvakovArsen Avakov - Wikipedia

    In 2020, Avakov published a book about the events in Kharkiv2014. Moments of the Kharkiv Spring”, where he added a unique document – “Plan for Kharkiv and the Kharkiv Region”, the plan of the separatists to seize the Kharkiv Oblast and further plans to seize the eastern regions of Ukraine.

  6. Pro-Ukrainian protesters in Kharkiv, February 2014. Unrest first gripped Kharkiv city on 22 February 2014, when Euromaidan protesters occupied the Kharkiv regional state administration (RSA) building.

  7. 12 de sept. de 2018 · The anti-government Russian Spring protests of 2014 were supported only by a minority of Kharkivs citizens—as was the case in these neighboring regions. Nevertheless, pro-Russian views were more prevalent in Kharkiv than almost anywhere else in Ukraine besides the conflict-torn Donbas region.