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Audrius Butkevičius, signatory of the Independence Act, Lithuanian Prime Minister of National Defense and expert in political technologies, visits Kauno Dienas’s studio today.
“I was planted in a ‘cypė’, which, in fact, I do not regret at all, because it was the freest year of my life,” says A. Butkevičius, guest of the “Kauno diena” study. These are not the words you would expect from a signatory to the Independence Act and the Lithuanian Prime Minister of National Defense after regaining independence, right? But a man who admits that he formed the Union of Political Prisoners and Exiles just by manipulating the feelings of an awakened nation can hardly surprise anyone else. The first part of the conversation with A. Butkevičius about the events in Belarus aroused a lot of interest and you can watch it here.
Therefore, we invite you to see the second part, in which A. Butkevičius, who presents himself as an expert in political technology, will tell his version of the turbulent youth of Lithuania, in which both the struggle for power and the rebellion of the volunteers
“You know, I’ve lived to such an age that I wonder if anyone likes my opinion,” A. Butkevičius said openly. So the conversation promises to be intriguing.
Photo by Vilmantas Raupelis
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