You're reading: Protestors against language law chained themselves in Zaporizhia

A man chained himself to the ramp outside the building of Zaporizhia city administration in protest against a judicial ban on demonstrations against Tuesday's bill on languages, which allows more extensive use of Russian.

On Thursday evening, about 100 nationalists gathered on the square in
front of the administration headquarters for a demonstration that had
been banned by a local court earlier that day. The demonstrators, who
represented the Prosvita regional party, had been going to protest the
law and “defend the Ukrainian language.”

In protest against the court ban, Prosvita leader Oleh Tkachenko
chained himself to the administration building ramp and a fellow party
member wound chains around himself and his six-year-old son.

Tkachenko said that, while police were away looking for a pair of
pliers to cut his chains, other nationalists were able to hold a rally
in protest against the controversial law. “Having sorted out the chains,
[police] were pulling me toward a car by the arms while [protesters] were pulling me backward,” he said.

Tkachenko said he had been taken to a police station and afterward to a court, “which issued me with an admonition.”

Police told Interfax-Ukraine that only one person was detained during the event.

Prosvita activists told the agency that they were planning to return
to the square next to the administration headquarters on Friday and join
a demonstration by journalists from a local newspaper who claimed on
Thursday that the paper’s editorial policy was under pressure from
authorities and that it had its copy censored.