Home » Have you changed your mind? Polytechnic issued and then returned Farion’s resignation letter

Have you changed your mind? Polytechnic issued and then returned Farion’s resignation letter

by alex

A message about the dismissal of professor of the Ukrainian language department Irina Farion briefly disappeared from the website of the National University of Lviv Polytechnic.

Journalists discovered this on Friday, November 17, the day after the document was supposed to come into force.

At the press center of the Lviv Polytechnic, when asked by journalists why the message disappeared, they replied that they would not comment on this topic. At the same time, they denied that at the time the dismissal order was issued, the rector of the polytechnic, Yuri Bobalo, was on vacation.

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For some time, the page with the message about Farion's dismissal on the university website was available only in the Google cache.

After lunch, after publicity on the Polytechnic website, this news became available for viewing again.

Have you changed your mind? Polytechnic issued and then returned Farion’s resignation letter

Screenshot: Lviv Polytechnic

Dismissal of Farion

On November 15, it became known that Irina Farion was fired from the Lviv Polytechnic after the opening of criminal proceedings by the SBU. This was confirmed by the Minister of Education and Science Oksen Lisovoy on his page on the social network Facebook.

The network also published a photo of the rector’s order to dismiss Farion from the position of professor at the Ukrainian language department.

After this, Farion announced that she intended to file a lawsuit against the Lviv Polytechnic National University.

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Scandals involving Farion

In one interview, she stated that she categorically does not accept Russian-speaking military personnel of the Armed Forces of Ukraine and cannot call them Ukrainians. Her words caused a wave of indignation.

Also recently, Farion published a post on social networks with a screenshot of a message from a pro-Ukrainian student in temporarily occupied Crimea, which included the sender’s first name, last name and other personal data.

Such actions of the ex-people's deputy became the reason for the persecution of the student by the Russian special services.

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