GLOBAL RESEARCH – When US President Barack Obama perpetrated his coup d’état in Ukraine in February 2014, and even had his agent Victoria Nuland select the person who was to rule Ukraine after the coup, it was with the expectation that the new government would renegotiate, and soon end, the Russian lease of the naval base at Sebastopol in Crimea, which wasn’t due to expire until 2042. (Up until 1954, that base had been in Russian territory because Crimea was part of Russia; but, after the Soviet dictator Khrushchev in 1954 arbitrarily transferred Crimea to Ukraine, and then the Soviet Union itself broke up in 1991, Russia was keeping its navy there by paying a lease on it from Ukraine.)
Ukrainian Muslim Crimean Tatar singer Susana Jamaldinova, known as Jamala, won the 2016 Eurovision Song Contest in Stockholm, Sweden. She sang song 1944 in the contest written and composed by herself. The song is about the plight of 238,000 Muslim Crimean Tartars expelled from their home in Southern Ukraine by Russian mass-killer Josef Stalin. Nearly 50% of them died during deportation. Today, Crimea is mostly populated by ethnic Russian Christians and Jews.
On February 22, Vadim Dengin, first deputy chairman of the committee of Duma (Russian parliament) urged the jury of Eurovision to ban Jamaldinova from singing the 1944 song, which highlights deportation of her grandmother along with her four sons and one daughter. It’s not a political parody against Russia. The song opens with lyrics; When strangers are coming. They come to your house, they kill you all and say: ‘We are not guilty, not guilty. Listen the song below.
https://rehmat1.com/2016/02/23/muslim-singer-represents-ukraine-at-eurovision-2016/