Sunday, December 27, 2009

Ukraine's Orange Revolution sours


2005 saw euphoric celebrations in Independence Square when Viktor Yushchenko was inaugurated Photo: AFP/GETTY
Victor Yushchenko is trailing far behind in the current election contest Photo: EPA
Mr Yushchenko's glamorous blonde ally, Yulia Tymoshenko, is now seen as a quarrelsome opportunist Photo: AFP/GETTY
FIVE years after Victor Yushchenko became the disfigured face of the Orange Revolution, it is tempting to believe the conspiracy theories that he was never actually poisoned at all. The skin that was once hideously pockmarked is gradually recovering, and with the help of make-up, there is little sign of the attack that nearly killed him back in 2004. Indeed, were it not for the blood tests that confirmed the presence of lethal dioxin poisons, the wear and tear on his cheeks might be simply the strains of steering Ukraine away from Russia's grasp and towards the West.

To this day, though, the Ukrainian president remains "vigilant" about his personal security - not that he thinks there was anything particularly personal about the original attack, which was blamed on pro-Kremlin political rivals. Whoever wins next month's presidential elections will find themselves in the firing line, he says, if they try to take Ukraine down the same path he has done "It was not about me, Yushchenko," he said in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph last week. "Ukraine was proving a bad example for Russia, and a good example for Europe, and that was the problem. Irrespective of the name of the next president, if he or she is a democrat, a pro-European politician, they will have similar problems."

One other thing, however, also looks certain - that new president is unlikely to be Mr Yushchenko. The man once hailed as democracy's battle-scarred posterboy is trailing far behind in the contest, scraping just single figures in some polls. After personifying the hopes of the Orange Revolution five years ago, he now symbolises the way its glow has faded, having failed to secure either European Union or Nato membership.

It marks a sour end to what began as a Christmas political fairy tale five years ago, when Mr Yushchenko and his glamorous blonde ally, Yulia Tymoshenko, formed a kind of "Beauty and the Beast" alliance against the Moscow-favoured Viktor Yanukovych. When Mr Yanukovych triumphed in what was seen as a rigged presidential election, Kiev's Independence Square filled with half a million protestors, who camped out night after night in sub-zero temperatures. People power finally triumphed when Ukraine's supreme court ordered the vote to be re-run on Boxing Day, ushering in Mr Yushchenko as president and Ms Tymoshenko as prime minister.

Last week, though, the unusually early cold snap that covered the square's Stalinist-era architecture with thick snow was the only reminder of those euphoric days. Mr Yushchenko and Mrs Tymoshenko, once iconised in Time and Elle magazines respectively, have proved unable to get along, leading the government into paralysis. That, in turn, has stymied efforts at economic and political reform, and convinced Brussels bureaucrats - already suffering from enlargement fatigue - that Kiev's government is far from ready for EU membership. To complete the drift back to square one, Mr Yanukovych - the man painted as the pro-Kremlin villain from the last elections - is favourite to win again this time, with or without fraud. Moscow, which viewed 2004's turmoil as a Western-inspired coup d'etat in its backyard, looks on gleefully.

If it is dispiriting for the Orange Revolution's figureheads, it is even more so for its student-based grassroots support, who were originally denounced as CIA-backed subversives when they threw their weight behind Mr Yushchenko's moderate Our Ukraine party. Nazar Pervak recalls how he was shown on government television as an aggressive young rabble-rouser, causing a rift with his father, a judge.

"It was extremely cold, like it is out there now," said Mr Pervak, 27, sipping coffee in an Independence Square cafe. "But it was very exciting - shopkeepers gave free food and clothes, businessmen even paid for hotels for protesters who came in from outside Kiev.

"Today, though, I feel very disillusioned, because we didn't use the great chance we had properly. Integration with Europe did not come true either. Now Western Europe simply accepts that Ukraine is now under Russia's influence."

So what went wrong? Critics pin some blame on Mr Yushchenko, who failed to use his momentum to give the Augean stables of Ukrainian politics the Herculean spring clean it needed. Parliament remains full of corrupt, criminal MPs, whose punch-ups in the chamber rival those of Ukraine's legendary boxing duo, Klitschko brothers. Thanks to constitutional wrangling and a problem with "electoral tourism", whereby politicians switch allegiances in exchange for favours, it is also hard to get much done.

The Yushchenko-Tymoshenko alliance was also forged more on a mutual dislike of Moscow than on any common policies, and over time, they have even parted company on that. Ms Tymoshenko now favours patching things up with Russia, a move seen as a betrayal by Mr Yushchenko, whose relations with the Kremlin are worse than ever. In August, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev withdrew Moscow's ambassador to Kiev, accusing Mr Yushchenko of being "anti-Russian". In an echo of the Litvinenko case in Britain, Moscow also refuses to extradite a suspect in the poisoning plot who moved to Russia.

Many Ukrainians also question whether Ms Tymoshenko or Mr Yushchenko really merited their Orange halos in the first place. Ms Tymoshenko, despite her pretty face, is seen as a quarrelsome opportunist, while Mr Yushchenko, although viewed as competent and honest, comes across as slightly plodding. Certainly, interviewing him is not like meeting some Eastern European Tony Blair - he is prone to monologues rather than soundbites, and reluctant to concede fault.

Asked why his popularity has slipped so badly, he responds firstly by insisting that he is still going to win, and then by reciting economic growth statistics at length. When The Sunday Telegraph tries to interrupt after five minutes, he tuts and continuing regardless. "Last year 23 million tourist visited Ukraine. This figure was 21 million for Turkey. One million Ukrainians travelled to Europe last year, two times more than 2007..." The list goes on and on, reminiscent - to Western ears at least - of Communist-era reports on annual tractor production.

Mr Yuschchenko is also under fire for campaigns to demolish all Soviet-era monuments, and to get the Ukrainian famine of the 1930s, when up ten million Ukrainians died, recognised internationally as a Stalin-sponsored genocide. Not only does it seem like a diversion from more immediate problems, it alienates some of the 20 per cent of Ukrainians who are ethnic Russians, who do not share his anomisity to Moscow anyway.

"The nationalist Ukrainians are trying to divide people into Ukrainian and Russian," said Viktor Knyazev, 31, an adviser in an import-export firm. "Other people died in that famine too, not just Ukrainians."

"Both Stalin and Lenin were negative figures, but at least they managed to keep order," added his wife Larisa, 28, who, like her husband, wants Mr Yanukovic back in power. "Why can't we have good relations with Russia?"

As things stand, the vote on January 17 is expected to end in a run-off between Mr Yanukovych and Ms Tymoshenko, heralding a gradual thaw with Moscow. Yet despite having the same old faces to vote for, the youthful Orange Revolutionaries are not entirely despondent. "There is a total disbelief in these candidates," admitted former activist Dmitry Yurchenko, 27. "But the Orange Revolution did at least change attitudes to politicians - there is a free media now, and people realise they can demand things if they want."

What is really needed, they argue, is for a new post-Orange Revolution generation of voters, devoid of the "Post-Soviet" mentality that does not readily question political leaders, and expects them to be omnipotent. "Once Yushchenko was in power, Ukrainians thought everything would simply change," said Mr Pervak. "They don't take responsibility themselves."

Mr Yushchenko, meanwhile, may have more time to spend beekeeping, a hobby he has enjoyed since childhood. Compared with running the affairs of 47 million Ukrainians, managing the industrious populations of his hives is a relaxing task. Yet for a man who detests Stalin, it is perhaps a strange choice - after all, with their armies of loyal workers, are bees not natural communists?

"No," he replies firmly. "Communists lose their ideals, they are people who bring injustice, who killed tens of millions of my people."

With that, the world's only apiarist-president is off, pausing only to show an advice note from one of his junior civil servants on constitutional reform. It probably won't solve his electoral ills, but that isn't the point. In the old days, he says, no lowly functionary would dare tell the president how to do his job. "That's the Orange Revolution for you."

Source:telegraph.co.uk/

Ukraine to Extract Oil, Gas from Black Sea


Ukrainian Prime Minister, Yuliya Timoshenko, says the State is to finance in 2010 large-scale work on the gas and oil deposits in the Black Sea. Photo by wikimedia
The Ukraine plans to begin developing oil and gas deposits in the Black Sea shelf in 2010.

The statement was made by the Ukrainian Prime Minister, Yuliya Timoshenko, cited by the Bulgarian news agency BTA.

Timoshenko says the State is to finance in 2010 large-scale work on the deposits after the conclusion of the court case to establish State ownership over the Black Sea shelf.

“This way gas and oil will no longer belong to some corrupt individuals; they will belong to the Ukraine, Timoshenko is quoted as saying.

Source:novinite.com/

President vows to work with any president elected in Ukraine


Russia does not have its candidates in the election of the Ukrainian president, so it will accept any choice of the Ukrainian people, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has said in his annual round-up interview granted to three federal television channels on Thursday.
At the same time, Medvedev emphasized he would like the future Ukrainian President to be oriented to development of 'good, warm and friendly relations' with the Russian Federation.

Source:nrcu.gov.ua/

Biggest financial investor in Ukraine


The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) is extending USD 7.9 million loan to Ukraine-based ErgoPack Ltd, the EBRD press-service has said.

The credit funds will be used to expand the company's products spectrum that now comprises plastic refuse bags, sponges and other household goods, enlargement of export operations in Russia, as well as the possibilities of materials recycling. ErgoPack Ltd. is one of Ukraine's largest producers and distributors of consumer household goods. The EBRD is the biggest financial investor in Ukraine. As of 1 November 2009, it had committed EUR 4.2 billion through 194 projects.


Source:nrcu.gov.ua/i

Ukraine Eager To Replace Olexiy Mykhaylychenko With Mircea Lucescu

According to a report from Reuters, the Ukrainian FA are eager to appoint Romanian gaffer Mircea Lucescu as the new head coach of Ukraine's national team. Lucescu is currently in charge at Europa League holders Shakhtar Donetsk.

Current head coach Olexiy Mykhaylychenko's two-year contract finishes at the end of this year and the governing body have made the decision not to offer him a new deal.

Ukraine failed to qualify for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa after defeat by Greece in the play-offs last month and Mykhaylychenko has paid the price.

"I have considered everything, weighed up all the pros and cons and decided to talk to the president of Shakhtar, Rinat Akhmetov, about the possibility of Mircea Lucescu combining his work at the club with work for the national team," Hryhory Surkis, president of the Ukrainian FA, told reporters.

Lucescu became Shakhtar's coach in 2004 and has led the club to three Ukrainian championship titles and the UEFA Cup since.

Source:goal.com

For 2009 goods turnover between Ukraine and Azerbaijan can total $800 million

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. The Ukrainian embassy in Azerbaijan forecasts that commodity turnover between the countries will exceed $1 billion next year.

On December 24, the Ukrainian Ambassador to Azerbaijan Boris Klimchuk said that for the first time over 18 years Ukraine achieved monthly sales volume of the goods (for October) to Azerbaijan on level of $57 million.

«For the same October Ukraine bought the goods in Azerbaijan in the total amount of $73.616 million, and the lion’s share among them belongs to oil,” ambassador said.

Ukraine became 4th trading partner for Azerbaijan regarding export to Azerbaijan.

“In accordance with data of Azerbaijani statistics, over 10 months trade turnover made up $474 million, including our export to Azerbaijan - 423 million that makes 93 % versus last year. Fall is not large, less than 10%, and there are many reserves,” ambassador said.

In addition, structure of Ukrainian export to Azerbaijan has changed little.

“Presently, cars, mechanisms, electrotechnics account for 37 % in structure of our export, that is almost $140 million. Last year ferrous, non-ferrous metal and products, made from them were on the first place. Now this position is the second - 88 million (24%).

Reason for it is obvious processes - a number of large construction works has finished objectively in Azerbaijan. Reduction is not such as it would be possible to expect. The trade marks as “Roshen”, “Sandora” , “Nemiroff” and others fixed in the Azerbaijani market. 500 “Slavuta” cars were supplied for needs of the Ministry of Labor and Social Protection and for veterans and invalids,” ambassador said.

Ukrainian union KrAZ also won the tender and supplied more than 100 (+20) cars KrAZ to Azerbaijan.

“Commodity turnover will not exceed 1 billion but it will not be so far. I forecast $800 million over this year. It could exceed a bit. If conjecture remain and we buy the Azerbaijan oil, we will achieve more than $1 billion next year. Assessed valuation of parcel for November totals $70 million,” ambassador said.




Source:abc.az/

Ukraine contract likely to be dishonoured

Ukraine has cut back on purchases of Russian gas.

The country has been facing serious cash problems and Russian supplier, Gazprom, has only given it until January 11th to pay up.

Gazprom has cut off supplies to the country over unpaid bills in the past.

Ukraine may find it hard to cover its next gas bill due to the International Monetary Fund turning down its request for a new loan tranche of 3.8 billion dollars.

While Ukraine's energy company Naftogaz has declined to comment, gazprom executives have said they will act according to the contract and will cut gas supplies to Ukraine again if the struggling ex-Soviet nation fails to pay for its energy supplies.

Last month, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Yulia Tymoshenko vowed there would be no repeat of previous gas crises in 2010.

Source:laosnews.net/