Uncomfortable, loud and omnipresent: With the departure of the Ukrainian diplomat Andriy Melnyk, an era comes to an end – politics

He will be remembered by many as an irritant: Hardly anyone has polarized people as much as Andriy Melnyk, the controversial and pugnacious Ukrainian ambassador in Berlin, in recent months.

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Civil society diplomats usually go under the radar – with the possible exception of former US Ambassador Richard Grenell, who was anything but diplomatic, and Swiss Thomas Borer, who once stirred up political Berlin with a delicate sex affair.

But we don’t live in ordinary times. And so Melnyk attracted attention at least from the beginning of the aggressive war against Ukraine because he was loud, uncomfortable and omnipresent. On talk shows, on Twitter, in print and on the radio, he gave free rein to his anger at the German government’s supposed reluctance.

That will soon be over: Melnyk will be called back to Kyiv in the fall. This emerged from a decree published by the President’s Office in Kyiv on Saturday. In addition to Melnyk, Ukraine’s ambassadors to Norway, the Czech Republic, Hungary and India have also been recalled, according to the President’s Office. Reasons or a future use of the diplomats were not mentioned.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy described the recall of Ambassador Andriy Melnyk from Germany as a normal process.

Melnyk has been living in Berlin with his wife and two children since 2015

“Today I signed decrees dismissing some ambassadors of Ukraine. This issue of rotation is a common part of diplomatic practice,” he said in a video message on Saturday, without naming any of the five ambassadors. New candidates would be prepared by the State Department. Melnyk has been living in Berlin with his wife and two children since 2015.

Four or six years is the rule for an ambassador’s term of office, so at eight years Melnyk has been in office for an above-average period of time. It was always discussed that he should be replaced in this position.

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However, it cannot be denied that there has been more and more crunching in the woodwork in recent months. Melnyk, who has now become a media star with almost 140,000 followers on Twitter, enjoyed unbroken support from Kyiv for a long time.

But in the end he was called back again and again. In particular, the interview with the journalist Tilo Jung had recently slipped from his grasp: Melnyk had described the former Ukrainian nationalist leader Stepan Bandera as the “quintessential freedom fighter in Ukraine”.

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