BRAWL breaks out on Ukrainian TV as journalist attacks Pro-Russian politician and puts him in a headlock after he refused to condemn Vladimir Putin as troops mass on border
Journalist Yuriy Butusov lashed out at pro-Russian politician Nestor Shufrych
Shufrych had refused to condemn Vladimir Putin, sparking the violent brawl
The former prime minister and president of Ukraine pleaded with them to stop
Comes as thousands of Ukrainian refugees are streaming into Russia today
A journalist has punched a pro-Russian politician in the face on live TV in Ukraine and put him in a headlock in front of the former prime minister in a debate over Vladimir Putin
The shocking brawl broke out between lawmaker Nestor Shufrych from the pro-Russian party Opposition Platform - For Life, and journalist Yuriy Butusov.
The politician was attacked by his fellow guest after he refused to condemn Vladimir Putin, as Russian troops amasses troops on the border for a potential invasion.
Shufrych was left bloodied after Butusov walked up to him and hit him in the face, with former PM Arseniy Yatsenyuk and ex-president Petro Poroshenko watching on.
Shufrych stood up to fight back and the two fell to the ground in the violent scrap before Butusov put his opponent in a headlock while the horrified guests pleaded with them to stop.
The two were eventually pulled apart and continued the discussion on Savik Shuster’s Freedom of Speech talk show.
Shufrych had been asked if Putin is a murderer and a criminal but he refused to answer and said: ‘Let Ukraine’s authorities deal with that.’
Former president Poroshenko slammed him for the remarks, saying: ‘There’s a Russian agent right here in the studio.’
The bitter spat comes as thousands of Ukrainian refugees are starting to stream into Russia today after Vladimir Putin’s allies ordered a mass evacuation of two separatist republics as part of a suspected ‘false flag’ operation to provide the pretext for an invasion.
Up to 700,00 civilians are being evacuated from the breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk after rebel leaders yesterday claimed Ukraine was about to attack the areas.
Hours later a car bomb rocked Donetsk in an alleged ‘assassination attempt’ of a top Putin-allied official, which Western intelligence agencies believe was faked as part of the ‘false flag’ deception.
Later two explosions at a ‘gas pipeline’ rocked the separatist city of Luhansk in eastern Ukraine in another suspected false flag attack.
Last night, US President said he is ‘convinced’ the Russian premier has made up his mind to launch an invasion after amassing almost 200,000 troops on the border.
In a televised address from the White House, Mr Biden said he has ‘reason to believe’ it will occur in the ‘coming days’ and will include an assault on the capital Kyiv.
After weeks of saying the US was not sure if Mr Putin had made the final decision to launch a widespread invasion, Mr Biden said that assessment had changed.
‘As of this moment I’m convinced he’s made the decision,’ Mr Biden said. ‘We have reason to believe that.’
He cited the United States’ ‘significant intelligence capability’ for the assessment.
The Ukrainian civilian refugees will be housed in tent cities provided by Putin’s government in Russia where they will receive a gift of $132.
False flag suspicions were also fueled by time stamps on the videos announcing the evacuations, that show they were taped by rebel leaders two days before being released.
Huge convoys of buses were laid on the for the refugees, after the evacuation was announced in video addresses by the leaders of the breakaway Republics which have also ordered a general mobilisation of all men to the army.
Multiple explosions could be heard on Saturday morning in the north of the separatist-controlled city of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, a Reuters witness said. The origin was not immediately clear. Ukraine said earlier that one of its soldiers had been killed.
Denis Pushilin, the leader of the so-called Donetsk People’s Republic, has called on all men ‘who are in the reserves to come to military conscription offices’ following a mass evacuation of women and children in Ukraine’s breakaway provinces to southern Russia.
Pushilin claimed his region’s forces had prevented attacks he said were planned by Ukraine, and that the Ukrainian army had continued manoeuvres.
Separatist authorities on Friday announced plans to evacuate around 700,000 people, citing fears of an imminent attack by Ukrainian forces – an accusation Kiev flatly denied.
Less than 7,000 people had been evacuated from Donetsk as of Saturday morning, the local emergencies ministry said.
Punch up: Ukrainian journalist and politician fight on live TV



![Catfish and the Bottlemen - Postpone (Lollapalooza Brasil 2017) [06/10]](https://ytimg.googleusercontent.com/vi/CIEGvPDZFf0/mqdefault.jpg)


![We asked our girl friend to choose her ideal type [ft. Evelyn Ha]](https://ytimg.googleusercontent.com/vi/d2EMkfj3WDY/mqdefault.jpg)








