From the BBC:
“Ukraine MP's advice to sell dog
to pay bills causes outcry”
Pictures of dogs flooded
Ukrainian social media after an MP advised a pensioner to sell her pet, so she
could pay her utility bills. The shaggy dog story began on Friday when Lyubov
Kolyucha, 66, called in to the 112 Ukrayina TV channel, to complain that her
small pension of 2,000 Ukrainian hryvnias ($79; £61) was not enough to live on.
But MP Yevgeniy Brahar's suggestion about how to raise the money led to jokes
and memes, including one stating: "First they came for the dogs, and I did
not speak out. Because I was not a dog." Mr Brahar, 25, of the ruling
Servant of the People party, later apologised on his Facebook page, saying he
was a "novice in politics". Together with the host of the political
phone-in, Mrs Kolyucha calculated that - after she had paid her gas bill -
there would be nothing left. In fact,
she would still be in debt.
Elite breeds : Gas prices for the
people of Ukraine have increased 10 times since 2014, while four out of five
retired Ukrainians receive a pension of less than 3,000 hryvnias ($119; £92)
per month. But during the programme, Mr Brahar expressed doubts about the
extent of Mrs Kolyucha's poverty. "If
she has [a dog] of an elite breed, she can sell it ... and easily pay [the
bills]," Mr Brahar said on air. Lyubov
Kolyucha was not impressed by the MP's response to her situation The deputy's unexpected advice quickly caused
outrage and multiple jokes on Ukrainian social media. One user showed several pictures of concerned
pups, with the caption: "When MP Brahar advised a pensioner to sell her
dog to pay for utilities". Another said on Facebook: "The dog refuses
to come outside. He's locked himself in the toilet and demands we first show
him the paid utility bill for the last month." Opposition party MP Iryna
Friz used the Ukrainian-language hashtag #Iwontsellmydog - calling on her
followers to post pictures of their pets. The following day, the deputy head of
the Servant of the People parliamentary faction, Yevheniya Kravchuk, said on
Facebook that Mr Brahar's remarks were "absolutely indecorous" and
apologised to the public for his words. "If one cannot handle live talk
shows, one should stick to drafting bills," she added. Mr Brahar finally apologised for his words.
"I am a novice in politics and have not yet learned how to answer
sensitive questions. I apologise to anyone who may have been offended by my
words," he wrote on his Facebook page. On Sunday, BBC News Ukraine
journalist Anastasiya Dzubak visited Mrs Kolyucha in her small town. She revealed that her dog - a 14-year-old
blind mongrel - was called Sharik and that she had no plans to sell him. Responding
to Mr Brahar's response to her complaint about her small pension, she believed
he had embarrassed himself. "I would tell him to sell his brain! One has
to think first who, where and what to say," she said.
^ This goes to show you that many
politicians around the world do not have a clue how the ordinary people in
their country actually live. ^
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