Ukraine Wants to Import Blacks to Replace the Hundreds of Thousands of Whites Killed

While Black Africans are kept safe in civilian jobs, the intention is to put more white Europeans through the meat grinder.
Yrylo Budanov, head of Volodymyr Zelensky’s presidential office in Ukraine, has announced plans to import migrant workers from Africa. Essentially, this entails that Ukraine will introduce new laws for the legal entry and residence of foreign workers.
Kyrylo Budanov, head of Volodymyr Zelensky’s presidential office in Ukraine, has announced plans to import migrant workers from Africa. Essentially, this entails Ukraine introducing new laws for the legal entry and residence of foreign workers, reports Remix .
The government will introduce a new list of countries with a “migration risk” to facilitate this plan, according to remarks made by Budanov at the CEO Club Ukraine. “They come in, obtain documents , and then move on. This is a problem that creates obstacles for business,” Budanov reportedly said, emphasizing that Ukraine will now take steps to make it easier for migrants to stay and work in Ukraine, writes
Last October, rumors circulated that Ukraine was directly recruiting mercenaries from Latin American drug cartels to fight in the war against Russia. Kyiv’s domestic policy of forced conscription, which often involves the use of violence, has already raised many concerns regarding the brutal practices of Zelensky’s army and the desperate situation Ukraine finds itself in as a result of the loss of life on the front lines. It has long been known that Ukraine is grappling with a severe demographic crisis, which is now being exacerbated by men who have died in the war or fled to other countries. Since the beginning of the war, voices have been raised urging mass immigration into Ukraine. Last year, Remix News reported that Vasyl Voskoboynik, chairman of the Ukrainian Association of Foreign Employment Agencies, stated that the population decline can no longer be compensated for by simply increasing the birth rate. Instead, immigration from Third World countries is the only solution.
Voskoboynik stated that the Ukrainian government must develop a migration policy by 2026 aimed at reducing this deficit. However, bringing in foreign workers and foreign fighters (who may or may not have criminal ties) will only increase concerns about Ukraine ever becoming a desired member of the European Union, given that the EU itself is dealing with crises caused by mass immigration. Last autumn, Ukraine’s former Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba, stated frankly that Ukraine might have to open its borders to Asian migrants due to the demographic crisis, as Ukraine already had the worst population growth in Europe before the war.
Kuleba said that Ukraine must focus on people “who need this country and are willing to rebuild it.” These people exist, he said, although they are in the minority, after which he indicated that the only solution is to bring in migrants.
These newcomers will also need adequate housing, wages, and a work environment to ensure that they choose Ukraine. However, the question remains how a country whose economy and government lie in ruins as a result of the war could accommodate mass immigration from the Third World. Contrary to how migration was promoted, many of the migrants who came to Western Europe ultimately drained the state coffers through social services, education, housing, and integration. In Germany, for example, foreigners cost the government nearly € 50 billion in 2023 .
Ukraine also does not have as many resources for the integration of migrants as Western states, and as already noted, integration there is far from a success story. Even groups that have lived there for centuries, such as the Hungarians, are actively discriminated against , even at the government level.
Since Ukraine will be rebuilt largely with Western resources, it is likely that Americans, Germans, and French, who are already heavily burdened by the costs of mass immigration, will be the ones paying for social services and integration for the newly arrived benefit recipients in Ukraine.
As the Russo-Ukrainian war continues, the likelihood increases that Ukrainian refugees and their children, who have already been living and working abroad for three years , will not return to economically devastated Ukraine.