Patostreamer Crawly was deported from Poland and returned to the Czech Republic? We know what the truth is
Pathostreamer Crawly, deported from Poland, suggested that he was in the Czech Republic. However, in the next entry he revealed that he recorded the video a few days earlier. He also declared that he would fight for his good name in a legal way.
Patostreamer Vladyslav O., known by his nickname Crawly, was detained by Warsaw police and Border Guard officers on November 29. As Jacek Dobrzyński, spokesman for the Ministry of Interior and Administration, informed on the same day at 21:15 at the border crossing in Dorohusk, the man was handed over to Ukraine. By decision of the Minister of Interior and Administration, at the request of the head of the Internal Security Agency, he was banned from re-entering the Schengen area for the next 10 years.
A Ukrainian cannot return to Poland for 10 years. He published a statement
“There are huge needs there, he will be able to prove himself,” commented Czesław Mroczek, deputy head of the Ministry of Interior and Administration. On November 30, the patostreamer published a recording showing that he was in the Czech Republic. A day later, he explained that “the video is old” and he would fight for his good name, but only through legal methods. He then published a statement in Russian and Polish.
“Any accusations made by the Polish authorities that I am allegedly carrying out a ‘mission to destabilize the situation in the country’ and that I am supposedly a ‘Russian spy’ will be challenged by me and my lawyers in court, as they are slander, slander and have no basis. The same applies to all Polish media that spread defamatory, unverified and false information about me,” Crawly began.
Patostreamer Crawly responded to the accusations of the Polish authorities. He announces a fight in court
“I will seek justice and my good name in all courts, including international ones. We have already taken appropriate steps in this direction: we have prepared and submitted applications to the relevant authorities. Never since the times of the Polish People’s Republic have freedom of speech and the ability to express oneself, including on the Internet, been as threatened as they are today,” continued Vladyslav O.
“The personal intervention of state officials, such as the Minister of the Interior, suggests that the state wants to control the Internet and suppresses freedom of speech, declaring as undesirable anyone who they do not like,” concluded the patostreamer.