Watch: Large Rallies In Support of Putin's Referendums And Mobilization 50x Larger Than Protests Against (youtube.com)
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    Francisco Gimeno - BC Analyst Narratives in conflicts usually count the same story in a different way showing at the end different positions. Kim Iversen shows us the position from Russia. That is fine, as we all should listen to every part in the conflict. But, from the perspective of international law, which is a hard fact, it doesnt matter at all. None of the narratives. The international law is clear. No invading force can make a referendum on the land occupied. Even if the group living there is of the same national roots of the invading power. Even if there were no invasion no referendum could be made if the constitution of the country doesn't allow it. See the Kosovo case. See the existence of Somaliland a functional country which is barely recognised by not even a half dozen countries. And so on. Think about the Sudetes in the 1930s when Hitler took that land "to protect the German minorities" with another "special operation". International law exists for something, not just the latest polarisation fad. This happening now if allowed means that tomorrow Russia can do the same in other many countries which belonged to the USSR and have big Russian minorities, like the Baltic States. Think about that.