The occupiers transferred the children's sanatorium "Brigantina" to the ownership of the Belgorod region of the Russian Federation free of charge

Присяжнюк Владислава
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16:44, 14 October
The occupiers transferred the children's sanatorium
Image source: seviltur.ru

The occupying authorities of the Crimea transferred the children's sanatorium "Brigantina" in Evpatoria to the ownership of the Belgorod region of Russia free of charge.

The relevant document is published on the website of the occupying government of Crimea.

It is noted that the movable and immovable property of the sanatorium was transferred from the state property of the occupied Crimea to the state property of the Belgorod region.

Kateryna Rashevska, a lawyer with the Regional Center for Human Rights, told Public Crimea that Russia was violating international humanitarian law and its obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights.

"After the nationalization of Brigantine, when it was transferred to the ownership of the Republic of Crimea, the occupying state had no right to transfer it to the subject of the Russian Federation. This is another violation for which Russia and high-ranking officials will be responsible", - she said.

In addition, the lawyer reminded that Massandra was state-owned, then was so-called nationalized and transferred to the Republic of Crimea. It was later handed over to the Russian president's office and then sold at auction to a person close to Putin, Kovalchuk.

"I can assume that the same thing will happen to Brigantina", - Kateryna Rashevska summed up.

What is known

  • The Prosecutor's Office of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea put forward a suspicion of plundering national values on the territory of the occupied peninsula to the director of the Massandra winery.
  • In the occupied Crimea, the oldest winery "Massandra" was sold at auction to the company "Southern Project" for 5.327 billion rubles ($ 72.8 million).
  • The Cabinet of Ministers called all potential buyers of "Massandra" violators of the law.