organization:party of regions

  • UPDATE : Critical lawmakers to be expelled from parliament after exposing corruption
    http://www.kyivpost.com/article/content/ukraine-politics/critical-lawmakers-to-be-expelled-from-parliament-after-exposing-corruptio

    A congress of the Bloc of President Petro Poroshenko on March 25 voted for stripping two critical ex-members of the bloc – Mykola Tomenko and Egor Firsov - of parliamentary mandates.

    If approved by parliament and the Supreme Administrative Court, the expulsion of Tomenko and Firsov will be the first-ever implementation of a constitutional clause allowing parties to expel members who leave their factions.

    The decision on stripping them of mandates follows large-scale corruption accusations by Firsov against Oleksandr Hranovsky, a high-ranking Poroshenko Bloc lawmaker, and his key ally Ihor Kononenko.

    Some critics even argue that the decision reflects the Poroshenko Bloc’s transformation into something worse than disgraced ex-President Viktor Yanukovych’s notoriously corrupt Party of Regions.

    Tiens, ça c’est une excellente idée à suggérer à FH pour sa prochaine réforme constitutionnelle.

  • New parties with old faces perform well in local elections
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/new-parties-with-old-faces-perform-well-in-local-elections-401684.html

    Ukraine’s local elections on Oct. 25 saw a whole range of new parties gain seats across the country. Yet, behind the new facade, there were plenty of old faces.

    The 94 percent of election results available on Nov. 9 show that three new political parties — Our Land (Nash Kray), Revival (Vidrodzhennia) and UKROP (Dill) — made it into top 10 country-wide in popularity.

    Our Land already received more than 4,100 seats in the regional and local councils, becoming the third among party lists after the Bloc of President Petro Poroshenko and ex-Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s Batkivshchyna Party. UKROP took seventh place among the parties with more than 1,800 seats in councils, following by Revival with more than 1,500 seats.

    The experts say that Our Land and Revival have been largely formed to shelter the escapees from ousted President Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions, while UKROP is a political project of billionaire oligarch and former Dnipropetrovsk governor Ihor Kolomoisky.

    Now these parties have a local base from which to convert their electoral — and possible future governing — success into seats in the national parliament

    Après les nouveaux habits du Parti des régions, un nouveau parti d’oligarques…

    The success of UKROP party has absolutely different grounds.

    A creation of billionaire Kolomoisky and infamous Dnipropetrovsk businessman Gennady Korban, the party positioned itself as a “patriotic force.” Party’s full name literally means “Ukrainian Union of Patriots.” UKROP (or dill) is also the way Russian-backed separatists derogatorily call the Ukrainian soldiers.

    Kolomoisky and Korban were credited with preventing the separatist advancement in the summer of 2014 by financing volunteer battalions and various PR campaigns. Now the prosecutors accuse Korban of running an organized crime group.

    Another factor which contributed to UKROP’s success is financial – the party had one of the most expensive campaigns with a massive number of billboards advertising the party.

    … et les nouveaux micro-partis locaux.

    The local elites are responsible for dozens of the new parties created this year.

    This way they tried to create the illusion for the electorate that the new people and new ideas stand behind them, Fesenko of Penta said. The local elites also wanted to show the government that "they are neither for nor against Kyiv and can continue on as they always did,” he added.

    One more reason — the local elites do not want to pay the unofficial fees to get on the lists of the bigger parties. Similarly, parties like Bloc Petro Poroshenko might not want these local elites for fear they could tarnish their reputations, especially if they are too close to Kyiv, Fesenko said.

    Bref, #plus_ça_change_plus_c'est_la_même_chose

  • Violence erupts after rival Kharkiv rallies
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/violence-erupts-after-rival-kharkiv-rallies-2-394928.html

    Special forces were deployed along with police negotiators on Aug. 3 when a rally in Kharkiv erupted into violent clashes, with pro-Ukrainian activists driving supporters of the Opposition Bloc into a building in a scene frighteningly…

    … la suite est manquante, la page n’est pas accessible (le Kyiv Post connait des problèmes d’accessibilité depuis ce matin), mais doit certainement évoquer le massacre d’Odessa.

    • RFE/RL
      Opposition Party Office In Kharkiv Attacked
      http://www.rferl.org/content/ukraine-opposition-party-office-attacked/27167147.html

      At least 50 young men, many in balaclavas, have attacked the former office of the Party of Regions in Ukraine’s eastern city of Kharkiv.

      The office is currently used by Ukrainian lawmaker Mykhaylo Dobkin, who represents the Opposition Bloc in parliament.

      The attackers destroyed a minibus parked near the office and smashed the building’s windows with stones on August 3.

      The attackers said they were representing the Ukrainian right-wing nationalist group Right Sector and an organization called Public Guard.

      They said they gathered at the site to protest against the Opposition Bloc’s participation in local elections in October and attacked the building after Dobkin’s people started shooting at them with firearms, wounding one activist.

      Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, is only about 20 kilometers from the Russian border.

    • … sous les yeux de la police (vidéo incorporée)…

      Masked gang attacks office of pro-Russian party in Ukraine’s Kharkiv - watch on - uatoday.tv
      http://uatoday.tv/society/masked-gang-attacks-office-of-pro-russian-party-in-ukraine-s-kharkiv-468173.

      Some 70 youths throw stones and set off explosions at ’Opposition Block’ building

      Police have launched an investigation after the group of men in Kharkiv vandalized the office of the Opposition Block political party, an indirect successor of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions.

      No injuries were reported.

    • TASS: World - Ukraine’s opposition activist kidnapped and beaten up in Kharkiv
      http://tass.ru/en/world/812297

      KIEV, August 3 /TASS/. An activist of Ukraine’s Opposition Bloc who was taking part in a pro-party rally in Kharkiv, a city in eastern Ukraine, was kidnapped on Monday. The party’s press service said that its office had also been attacked.

      The activist was standing outside the Kharkhiv regional justice department where the Opposition Bloc was planning to hold a picket when, according to witnesses, he was grabbed by unidentified persons who threw him into a camouflage range rover with the Azov [volunteer battalion - TASS] inscription on it,” the Opposition Bloc said in its statement.
      The man was then taken to a cemetery where he was undressed and beaten up. The kidnappers also took away the activist’s cell phone.
      Four people in balaclava helmets questioned and bullied the man for forty minutes. They asked him why he had come to a rally and where his parents worked. After that, they beat him up and left him at the cemetery. At the moment, the man is receiving all the necessary medical help,” the Opposition Bloc said.
      Ukraine’s Opposition Bloc headed by Deputy Mikhail Dobkin rallied outside the Kharkov regional administration on August 3. They want the region’s justice department to register the party’s Kharkiv branch so that the Opposition Bloc could run in the local elections. At the same time, activists of another organization called Gromadska Varta gathered outside the justice department to protest against the Opposition Bloc’s registration.

    • Pour les (gentils) assaillants (de Secteur Droit), ce sont, évidemment, les (méchants) assiégés qui ont commencé…

      Dobkin’s office in Kharkiv : Opposition Bloc MP Dobkin’s office attacked with firecrackers as shootout occurred. VIDEO - Dobkin, assault, Kharkiv, titushki, Right Sector, Dobkin’s office in Kharkiv, Attack (03.08.15 15:39) « Video news | EN.Censor.net
      http://en.censor.net.ua/video_news/346263/opposition_bloc_mp_dobkins_office_attacked_with_firecrackers_as_shooto

      Several dozens of young men wearing camouflage and balaclavas attacked a building previously used as a Party of Regions office and being an office of the Opposition Bloc MP Mykhailo Dobkin at the moment.

      As reported by Censor.NET citing Interfax, the people broke the windows in a van parked in front of the building. They also hurled stones and firecrackers at the building with gunfire being heard.

      Police are holding 20-30-meter perimeter, though without intervening. They refuse to give any comments on such a behavior.

      As reported, the attackers were activists of a reserve battalion of the Volunteer Ukrainian Corps (DUK) “Right Sector”, as well as activists of Hromadska Varta. Kharkiv (Public Guard. Kharkiv organisation - ed.).

      According to them, the first to use force were Dobkin’s titushkas barricaded in the office. They started firing traumatic weapons. After that, according to activists, they responded with stones and firecrackers. Source: http://en.censor.net.ua/v346263

      (photos et vidéos)

    • Kharkov branch of Opposition bloc was denied registration
      http://news.rin.ru/eng/news///123060
      (traduction un peu défaillante…)

      The justice Department in the Kharkiv region refused to register the regional organization of the Party " Opposition bloc, said on the first day of the week the head of the regional Department of justice Yury Georgievskiy.
      “I have decided to refuse the registration of the regional organization of the Party” Opposition bloc “, ? the news Agency the words of St. George. George recalled that on 24 July Authorized Deputy from the Opposition bloc Mikhail Dobkin filed in the Office of the documents with 2 requirements. First ? note conclusion about stop the legal entity of the regional organization of the Party” Law and order “, which last year was renamed the” Opposition bloc “. Second ? take note and register the regional organization of Party” Opposition bloc ".

      The Minister explained that the Office could not fulfill the Second requirement, because you are running the destruction of the regional organization of that political Party, and as long as it will not be completed in Accordance with applicable law, registration is not possible. According to his statement, the liquidation procedure will take More than 2 months, for this reason, the Opposition bloc will not have the opportunity to participate in the elections.

      George also said that the Management of four refused registration of the territorial organization of the “Opposition bloc” because of deficiencies in the documents submitted by the Authorised Party “Law and order”. For its part, the Opposition bloc said about the readiness to ignore local elections." We refer to all democratic countries and international organizations not to recognize the elections, which is not allowed opposing political force", - has told in the Party.

      Remember, in the centre Hurikova Monday riots were started after the meetings at the County courthouse on Sumskaya street, where on the first day of the week heard a case on the registration of the regional branch of the Opposition bloc. Authorized Mikhail Dobkin several times submitted documents, but the justice Ministry denied registration, indicating the number of observations.

      About 50 people in the shape with black and red stripes stormed the office of the former Party of regions. Unknown in balaclavas began to dismantle paving under construction near temple of the Holy myrrh-Bearers and throw in the house, and smashed parked near the office of the minibus. Later it was claimed that the battalion of special purpose of the Ministry of interior of Ukraine East building surrounded the office of the “Opposition Party” in Kharkov, where he barricaded unidentified, one of which was called as the assistant Deputy Opposition bloc Mikhail Dobkin. Later the young men who were in the Kharkiv office of the Opposition bloc, escorted to police stations. The events in Kharkiv qualified as “hooliganism with a use of weapons”, what happened on the first day of the week clashes in the city opened two criminal cases, said the Prosecutor’s office of Kharkiv region of Ukraine.

    • La page est accessible.

      Violence erupts after rival Kharkiv rallies
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/violence-erupts-after-rival-kharkiv-rallies-2-394928.html

      Special forces were deployed along with police negotiators on Aug. 3 when a rally in Kharkiv erupted into violent clashes, with pro-Ukrainian activists driving supporters of the Opposition Bloc into a building in a scene frighteningly reminiscent of the May 2 Odesa tragedy.

      La suite reprend les éléments déjà exposés ci-dessus. Dommage qu’elle n’ait pas été accessible, cette une synthèse assez claire dès hier soir.

  • Government’s duel with oligarchs switches to Odesa beach
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/business/governments-duel-with-oligarchs-switches-to-odesa-beach-394260.html


    Multi-millionaire property developer Vasyl Khmelnytsky said the “populist” methods of Odesa Governor Mikheil Saakashvili threaten investment after the former Georgian president ordered thick blocks of concrete removed on July 20 to give the public access to a city beach near property that Khmelnytsky owns on land he leases from the city.
    © Courtesy

    The public battle between Ukraine’s rich and powerful oligarchs and the government has shifted to the Black Sea port city of Odesa, and the current battleground – appropriately for a seaside city – is a beach.

    Citing a broadly defined law in the Water Code that allows the public unimpeded access to shorelines, Odesa Governor Mikheil Saakashvili on July 20 ordered a fence to be removed made of concrete blocks and shattered glass that had prevented public access to a city beach.

    The seashore area is part of a private residence that sits on land leased from the city government. The residence belongs to multi-millionaire property developer and former Party of Regions lawmaker Vasyl Khmelnytsky.

    Khmelnytsky, in an emailed statement on July 24, said that on the day the concrete fence was removed, the city government had given him notice either to provide within 10 days permits for the leased land and other related documents, or to remove the barrier.

    But immediately after this (receiving the notice) the fence was demolished without any judicial ruling, without court executors and without even waiting for July 30, (the date) set by the city council,” Khmelnytsky said.

    The Prosecutor General’s Office has cited legal hurdles and Interpol’s reluctance to put suspects on its wanted list as reasons for the slow pace of the investigations.

    • Pendant ce temps-là, un peu plus à l’ouest…

      La plage de Vallauris officiellement fermée avant l’arrivée du roi Salmane
      http://www.lemonde.fr/societe/article/2015/07/25/la-plage-de-vallauris-officiellement-fermee-avant-l-arrivee-du-roi-salmane_4

      Les quelque cent mille signatures recueillies en une semaine sur la pétition en ligne n’auront pas infléchi la position des autorités : la plage de la Mirandole, qui jouxte la villa du roi d’Arabie saoudite, à Vallauris Golfe-Juan, est interdite au public depuis samedi 25 juillet à 8 heures.

      La préfecture des Alpes-Maritimes a confirmé avoir signé vendredi soir un arrêté d’interdiction d’accès du public à la bande littorale qui longe la demeure où le monarque saoudien a prévu une visite privée pour ses vacances, accompagné d’un millier de Saoudiens, dont sept cents de sa suite. A défaut de grillage, dont la mise en place a été interdite, des policiers en faction sont désormais chargés de bloquer l’accès au rivage.

      Cet arrêté ne devait initialement entrer en vigueur qu’à l’arrivée de Salmane Ben Abdelaziz Al-Saoud, prévue samedi après-midi, mais des risques d’occupation de la plage de la part de personnes contestant la fermeture de cet espace public ont précipité la décision des autorités. Par ailleurs, un arrêté du préfet maritime doit entrer en vigueur ce samedi midi, interdisant toute navigation en mer dans une bande littorale de 300 mètres au droit de la propriété saoudienne.

      Des policiers mobilisés

      Ce contournement exceptionnel de la loi littoral, qui interdit en principe toute privatisation des plages, a été justifié par des motifs de sécurité par la préfecture de Grasse. « Dans le contexte actuel, il est impossible de faire coexister un chef d’Etat en exercice, qui plus est engagé sur des terrains de guerre, avec des riverains, a expliqué au Monde le sous-préfet. La France a le devoir de protéger les chefs d’Etat des pays alliés qui la visite, et l’Arabie saoudite en fait partie. »

      Ça fait toujours ça de moins pour NDDL (et ailleurs…)

  • Has The War In Ukraine Moved To A Second Front?
    http://www.rferl.org/content/war-in-ukraine-second-front-transcarpathia-russia/27125339.html

    If Ukraine’s east is a combustive mix of languages and loyalties, its west can be even trickier.
     
    In Transcarpathia, many residents live within shouting distance of four EU countries. Inhabitants speak not only Russian and Ukrainian but Hungarian, Romanian, German, Slovak and Rusyn. Many of its 1.3 million inhabitants hold more than one passport.
     
    It’s a region, in short, where loyalties don’t necessarily lie with Kyiv. So when armed violence broke out on July 11 between police and Right Sector nationalists in the Transcarpathian city of Mukacheve, it was an eerie echo of the Kremlin’s insistence that Ukraine’s problem is not outside influence, but internal strife.
    […]
    Right Sector — a heavily armed militant organization branded by Russia as “neo-Nazis” and “fascists” for their ties to World War II-era Ukrainian nationalist Stepan Bandera, who cooperated with German forces to fend off Soviet troops — is estimated to have as many as 10,000 members serving in volunteer battalions in the Donbas war zone and elsewhere in the country.

    A sometimes uneasy ally of last year’s Maidan protesters, the group has since grown critical of the government of Petro Poroshenko, in particular for cracking down on volunteer units. But one member, while confirming the group’s intention to protest in Kyiv, said they would not do so “with assault rifles and machine guns.

    The group has also sought to portray the weekend violence as fallout from the group’s self-described anticorruption efforts. Oleksiy Byk, a Right Sector spokesman, said police were to blame for the bloodshed.
    […]
    Local reports suggest the Mukhacheve violence may have been the result of a business dispute. Cross-border smuggling of cigarettes and other contraband is said to be worth billions of dollars in Transcarpathia, with its easy ground access to Romania, Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland.

    The region’s customs officials have been suspended in the wake of the violence, and at least one authority — parliamentary deputy Mykhaylo Lan, who has been accused of ties to smuggling networks — has been called in for questioning.

    But it remains to be seen whether suspicions will trickle up to powerful local authorities like the so-called Baloha clan — revolving around Viktor Baloha, a former emergency situations minister and current parliamentary deputy — which is said to rule Transcarpathia with near-complete autonomy.

    Some observers have suggested that the July 11 violence was little more than a battle for influence between Lan and Baloha.
    […]
    Transcarpathia, which during the 20th century was alternately ruled by the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary before being claimed by the Soviet Union, leans heavily on largesse from its western neighbors.

    Budapest in particular has provided passports and special benefits to residents with proven Hungarian roots. The country’s pro-Russian prime minister, Viktor Orban, has set Ukraine on edge with professed concern for Transcarpathia’s Hungarian minority, which many see as shorthand for a Russian-style separatist conflict.

    Moreover, the region has long shown an affinity for pro-Russian parties. In the 1990s, Transcarpathia was a solid supporter of the Social Democratic Party of Viktor Medvedchuk, the pro-Kremlin strategist with close personal ties to Vladimir Putin. Before the Maidan protests, it put its weight behind Viktor Yanukovych and the Party of Regions, rather than pro-democratic “orange” candidates.

    Political analyst Viktoria Podhorna says government negligence has only added to Transcarpathian exceptionalism. Poroshenko, who earned atypical support from Baloha, appears to have responded by involving himself only minimally in Transcarpathian issues.

    There’s some kind of trade-off between the central government and regional authorities, who are basically owned by local princelings,” Podhorna says. “And this is the foundation that can lead to conflicts like those in Donbas.

  • Shootout in western Ukraine kills at least two people ; risk of wider conflict exists
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/shootout-in-western-ukraine-takes-away-the-lives-of-at-least-2-people-ques

    A major tragedy occurred in Mukachevo today. A group of 15-20! people arrived at the location which had to do with the Ukraine’s member of parliament that had sobering experience from the 90’s – Mykhaylo Lanyo,” wrote Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to the Interior Ministry, on Facebook.

    Prosecutors in Zakarpatya Oblast say that there were 20 people dressed in camouflage suits with signs of Right Sector on their clothes and vehicles. It says that the Right Sector members were meeting with some locals in a café to redistribute power.

    After this the mentioned individuals… began the shooting,” the prosecutor reports.

    The local police, the report says, then came to the scene and blocked the entrance to the café after which the armed individuals opened fire at the police using such weapons as rocket-propelled grenade launchers and Kalashnykov automatic rifles. The remaining shooters were hiding in a forest plantation.

    But according to the Right Sector’s official website, Lanyo, a former member of the Party of Regions, is said to have tried to use force against members of the right-wing group.

    We demand: the immediate public arrest of deputy Lanyo, that was directly involved in the events, all of the bandits and security forces that opened fire and who gave the orders,” the Right Sector wrote.

    Mustafa Nayyem, member of parliament and former journalist, who as of late July 11 was in Mukachevo, wrote on his Facebook page that redistribution of the cigarette smuggling business was the likely reason for the conflict between the two groups.

    Affaire très opaque… mélange de trafic et de politique.

    Mikhaïl Ivanovitch Lanyo (ou Lano) est député de la circonscription de Moukatchevo en Transcarpathie, il est membre de Volia Narodu (la liberté du peuple) http://volyanarodu.com.ua/member/lano-mihaylo-ivanovich sa biographie indique qu’il est président de la Fédération de Football de Transcarpathie depuis décembre 2006.

    La Ruthénie subcarpatique est une zone disputé. C’est le nom qu’on lui donnait quand la région est devenue autonome dans la foulée des Accords de Munich, puis indépendante lorsque la Slovaquie s’est détachée de la Tchécoslovaquie lors de l’invasion de celle-ci par les Allemands, indépendance. Immédiatement envahie et annexée par la Hongrie, avant d’être annexée à l’Ukraine en 1945.
    La région actuelle contient une minorité hongroise (12-13% dit WP https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oblast_de_Transcarpatie ).

  • Mystery of Ukraine’s Richest Man and a Series of Unlikely Suicides
    http://www.newsweek.com/2015/04/17/ukraine-plagued-succession-unlikely-suicides-former-ruling-party-320584.ht

    Feuding oligarchs are battling to retain or increase their influence in the new order, and their lieutenants are turning up dead.

    Melnychuk was a prosecutor in the southern port town of Odessa, governed by Kolomoisky ally Ihor Palytsia. He is just one of at least eight officials appointed by the Yanukovych regime, ousted by pro-democracy protesters in February last year, to die in mysterious circumstances over the past three months.

    And Ukraine’s law enforcement doesn’t want to talk about them.

    When Melnychuk’s body was found on 22 March, police initially told local journalists he had committed suicide. But it soon emerged that alarmed neighbours had called police on hearing of a late-night struggle. Pathologists found he had been badly beaten before the fall. Later the same day, Odessa prosecutors registered Melnychuk’s “suicide” as a murder, and arrested a former police officer they describe only as “citizen K”. 

    In reply to a legal request by Newsweek for information on investigations into the deaths of seven other former officials, all tied to Viktor Yanukovych’s Party of Regions, the General Prosecutor’s Office responded that all the information about all the deaths was a state secret – a staggering claim to make about a series of apparently unrelated civilian deaths they told the press were suicides.

    After an intervention by the Presidential Administration, the General Prosecutor’s Office disclosed that four of the seven deaths are being investigated as murders, with another investigation as yet unclassified. The two remaining cases had been closed with no evidence of a crime. No other information was provided.

    At the heart of this murder mystery is one wealthy businessman in particular – 48-year-old billionaire Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest man with a fortune estimated at $7bn. A former lawmaker for the Party of Regions (rebranded as the “Oppositon Bloc” for the current parliament) he retains serious clout in the country through his purchasing power and long-standing allies in law enforcement and parliament.

    Ahkmetov was the grey cardinal of the Party of Regions,” says Dmitriy Gnap, an investigative journalist for Ukrainian TV channel Hromadske who has spent more than a decade reporting on the oligarch’s activities. “Yanukovych was the official leader, but Ahkmetov was the man who controlled all the financing, all the political actions of the party.

    Ukraine’s new government has opened numerous criminal probes into those political actions, but with several of those who knew most about Akhmetov’s activities now dead, they can never be compelled to testify in court.

  • Ex-MPs of Ukraine on wanted list – advisor to SBU chief
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ex-prime-ministers-of-ukraine-on-wanted-list-advisor-to-sbu-chief-377663.h

    Former MPs from the Party of Regions who sat in the previous, 7th convocation of the Verkhovna Rada, Mykola Levchenko and Vadym Kolesnichenko, have been put on a wanted list, Markiyan Lubkivsky, an adviser to the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) chief has said.

    Contrairement à ce que dit le titre original, il ne s’agit pas d’ancien premiers ministres (PMs) mais d’anciens députés (MPs)


    Vadym Kolesnichenko, have been put on a wanted list, an adviser to the Security Service of Ukraine chief said.
    © AFP

    (photographié ici lors d’une de ces séances de débat qui font la réputation de l’Assemblée ukrainienne, V. Kolesnichenko est celui qui baisse la tête…)

  • Boris Danik : Imagining Donbas vote for Ukraine’s parliament
    http://www.kyivpost.com/opinion/op-ed/boris-danik-imagining-donbas-vote-for-ukraines-parliament-359055.html

    No one should discount the possibility of the makeup of the next Rada showing a nearly a 50-50 divide, similar to that marking all previous regimes in the independent Ukraine. This divide essentially exists into this day, with deputies now committed to the oligarchs able to swing the outcomes. Having little choice after the ouster of Yanukovych, they have swung to shape a pro-Ukrainian majority.

    Looking with open eyes, it is impossible to deny that elections for Ukraine’s parliament in Donetsk and Luhansk regions, if they take place there, would be for a party agenda similar to that of the Party of Regions.

    Notwithstanding Russia’s role in stimulating the Donbas separatism, large segments of population in that area didn’t need much stimulation to vote with guns against the new Ukrainian government which they detested. And many still feel the same way, embittered by urban destruction and civilian casualties for which they blame Ukrainian troops.

    Denial of the evidence of hate which is there for all to see doesn’t help. Patriotically-inclined citizens who avoid a reality check can only lead to collective mistakes and exaggerated expectations.
    (…)
    From a Ukrainian point of view, the question is not what would be best (the pace of war is hardly under Kyiv’s control), but rather what options not to take. Attempts to crush the rebels in their city stronghold would be countered by more firepower from Russia, including direct across-border shelling.

    Hypothetically, reconquering all of Donbas would open a plethora of problems for Ukraine’s democratic government, how to accommodate the traditionally pro-Russian population that basically despises Ukraine not of their own making, with Russian civilization attributes.

    Perhaps the best realizable outcome could be a semi-permanent ceasefire if all sides would be willing to accept it. After all, a ceasefire in Korea has held a long time. Or think of Transnistria, and don’t reject it out of hand. It may be a puny model but better than the non-stop war. Again, this is hypothetical, but so are most other solutions.
    Boris Danik is a retired Ukrainian-American living in North Caldwell, New Jersey.

    Un point de vue plutôt mesuré sur le Kyiv Post.

  • Députés communistes au parlement ukrainien

    • 01/07/2014 : Six MPs leave Communist Party faction in Ukraine’s parliament
    http://en.interfax.com.ua/news/general/211577.html

    Six MPs have left the faction of the Communist Party in Ukraine’s parliament.

    Verkhovna Rada Chairman Oleksandr Turchynov announced this at parliament’s meeting on Tuesday, an Interfax-Ukraine correspondent reported.

    • 01/07/2014 : le président de l’assemblée promet une dissolution prochaine du groupe parlementaire. Pour cela, il propose une modification du règlement de l’assemblée et invite à passer une loi interdisant le parti communiste.

    Ukranian News - Turchynov Deems Possible Dissolution Of Communist Party Faction After Parliament Procedural Regulations Changed
    http://un.ua/eng/article/518315.html

    Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Oleksandr Turchynov deems possible dissolution of the Communist Party of Ukraine faction after the Parliament Procedural Regulations changed, he has told a parliament meeting.
    “What concerns disestablishment of the faction: I have instructed the Procedural Regulations Committee to look into this question. The response was that under the Procedural Regulations the minimum item number [of comprising MPs] applies only to deputy groups. To eliminate this problem there is a proposition to alter the Procedural Regulations,” he said.
    Turchynov encourages lawmakers not to rest upon the slogans of the need to dissolve the Communist Party faction but to bring in a corresponding legislative initiative.

    • 04/07/2014 : les députés communistes quittent la séance, la parole ne leur ayant jamais été passée. Le président de l’assemblée : j’espère que vous n’aurez plus l’occasion de revenir, on s’en occupe.

    Turchynov hopes never to see the Communist party in Parliament. | UaToday.org – Hot Ukrainian news
    http://uatoday.org/turchynov-hopes-never-to-see-the-communist-party-in-parliament

    The Communist party in the Verkhovna Rada left the session hall of the Verkhovna Rada in protest.

    the Communists stated during today’s meeting of Parliament have never been given the floor to speak.

    So, MP Sergei Gordienko said that his group could not support their viewpoint on the draft laws, therefore leaving the session hall, writes UNIAN.

    In his turn, the speaker of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine Oleksandr Turchynov said: “Predict, that you don’t have to go back into the hall, because of the basis in fact for the existence of your party does not exist. The error that is in the rules, I hope, will soon be fixed.

    • 03/07/2014 : les anciens députés communistes rejoignent d’anciens députés du Parti des régions pour former un nouveau groupe parlementaire.

    Former members of the Party of Regions and the Communist Party of Ukraine united in the Verkhovna Rada. Capital.ua. The Capital news from Ukraine.
    http://www.capital.ua/en/publication/23952-s-novymi-silami-byvshie-deputaty-partii-regionov-i-kpu-ob-edinilis-v-r

    Yesterday, Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Oleksandr Turchynov announced the creation of a new deputy group “For Peace and Stability”. It includes 32 parliamentarians, which is the minimum required number for forming a group that has the rights of a faction. Former members of the Party of Regions faction Vitaliy Hrushevskiy, Yevhen Balytskiy and also Oleksandr Prysyazhnyuk, who together with five deputies abandoned the Communist Party faction, became authorized representatives of the association. Fellow MPs can only guess as to the policy that the new group will conduct and at whom it will be oriented.

    L’orientation politique n’est pas encore très claire ; les provenances variées augurent d’une certaine difficulté à trouver une ligne politique commune. Ils ne se déclarent pas opposer au président Porochenko.

    Le chef du PC, Simonenko, a exclu les députés du parti et les accusent d’être à la solde de Sergueï Kurchenko, homme d’affaires de l’époque Yanoukovitch, en fuite à l’étranger et sous le coup de sanctions de l’Union européenne.

    C’est aussi l’avis des députés de UDAR et du parti des régions. Chez Ioulia Timochenko, on les accuserait plutôt d’être des pro-Poutine…

    The UDAR and PoR factions also stick to the version of Kurchenko’s involvement in the new association, though they comment on this only on the right of anonymity. The businessman himself denied that he financed the creation of the political project in an interview for the Russian Novaya Gazeta. “I do not personally know Kurchenko, never met with him and did not hold talks with his representatives. Symonenko’s accusations that we are financed by Kurchenko are nonsense,” says Holub.
    People’s deputy Oleh Medunitsa (Batkivshchyna party) believes that the new association will be a “faction of Putin”. His colleague in the faction Oleksandr Bryhynets offered another version: the group could have been formed as a new coalition in the event that one of the factions would abandon the existing one with the aim of announcing early parliamentary elections.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serhiy_Kurchenko

  • From Washington to Moscow, everyone is lying about what’s happening in Ukraine

    Putin’s statement about the crisis was full of distortions and manipulations. But in an unusual paper meant to expose them, the U.S. State Department offered its own share of inaccuracies and half-truths.
    Haaretz 6 mars 2014

    By Ariel Danieli | Mar. 6, 2014 | 10:50 PM | 3

    The U.S. State Department on Thursday accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of lying about what is happening in Ukraine, and particularly regarding the circumstances leading to Russian military intervention in the Crimean Peninsula.

    The paper the Americans issued is unusual in the diplomatic sphere, and refers to Putin’s statement two days ago to correspondents at his residence. It contains 10 points, about which, the State Department says, Putin lied. But apparently in some of the paragraphs they weren’t entirely accurate on the other side of the Atlantic either. They issued a version that suits U.S. interests. Especially grating, Washington ignored extreme right-wing elements in the new government in Kiev.

    In Paragraph 3 the Americans seem to be choosing a very specific interpretation of the situation as it developed in Kiev late last month. “Mr. Putin says: ‘The opposition did not implement the February 21 agreement with former President Viktor Yanukovych.’ The facts: ‘The agreement presents a plan according to which the parliament must reinstate the 2004 constitution, as well as returning the country to a system that strengthens the legislative branch. Yanukovych was supposed to sign the legislation within 24 hours and to bring the crisis to an end peacefully. He refused to meet his commitment, and instead packed up the contents of his home and fled, and left behind evidence of extensive corruption,’” said the document.

    In effect, there was chaos in the Ukrainian capital, and a substantial percentage of the anti-Russian opposition demonstrators rejected the agreement formulated by the warring parties with the mediation of the European Union. The developments from the moment of the signing until Yanukovych’s flight and his ouster from parliament is not entirely clear, nor is it clear why mention of his ostensible corruption is relevant to the question of the legitimacy of removing him by force.

    In addition, the protest leaders still recognized him as president on February 25, and only said that he “is not actively leading the country as of now.”

    In Paragraph 4 the Americans deal with the legitimacy of the new government, and with Putin’s claim that Yanukovych is still Ukraine’s legitimate leader. The document of the State Department in Washington notes that on March 4 Putin himself said that the ousted president “has no political future,” and that his party, the Party of Regions, voted in favor of removing him and installing the new government, and that the parliament in Kiev confirmed the swearing in of the government by a huge majority of 82 percent.

    But the Obama administration ignored Paragraph 111 in the Ukrainian constitution, which states that parliament can oust the president only if he committed a crime. The initiation of an impeachment process must be approved by two-thirds of the legislators, with 75 percent of MPs voting in favor of the ousting itself. Those votes were not held, and therefore ratification of the new government, even with 82 percent support, was passed in contradiction of the constitution.

    In Paragraph 8 the State Department wrote: “Mr. Putin says: ‘There were mass attacks against churches and synagogues in southern and eastern Ukraine.’ The facts: ‘The religious leaders in the country and activists who favor freedom of religion said that there were no attacks against churches. All the leaders of the Church in Ukraine support the new political leadership and called for national unity. Jewish organizations in southern and eastern Ukraine reported that there was no increase in anti-Semitic incidents.”

    We found no evidence of attacks against churches in Ukraine, but in Haaretz we have already reported on a fear in the Jewish communities of an increase in anti-Semitism, as well as several incidents in which extreme right-wing gangs intensified their activity against synagogues and Jewish institutions. Our correspondent in Crimea, Anshel Pfeffer, reported that Jews were beaten in Kiev and a synagogue was destroyed there, and similar incidents occurred in the city of Zaporozhye in southeast Ukraine and in the Crimean capital of Simferopol.

    Despite that, many pointed to the fact that Russia is trying to defame the new government in Kiev by portraying it as extremely rightist, anti-Semitic and Nazi in its entirety, and some people even wondered whether those incidents weren’t Russian provocations, in order to arouse opposition to the new government. Whatever the case, it can’t really be said that there were no anti-Semitic incidents at all in southeast Ukraine.

    In the last paragraph, Paragraph 10, the United States claimed that Putin is lying about the fact that the Ukrainian parliament is influenced by extremists and terrorists. The Americans claim that the Rada (parliament) is the institution most representative of the Ukrainian public, and that extreme-right organizations that were involved in the clashes in Independence Square are not represented in it.

    But the actual situation differs significantly from the picture Washington is trying to paint. It’s true that legislators from the pro-Russian parties voted in favor of the new government, but we cannot ignore the fact that many of their members fled from Kiev, so that it is hard to claim that the parliament provides optimal representation for the pro-Russian east. In addition, the far-right party Svoboda (Liberty) received 38 seats in the legislature in the most recent elections, and its members espouse extreme anti-Semitic and nationalist views.

    In addition, the party received five portfolios in the new government, including justice minister and deputy prime minister. “The Right Sector, a small organization, armed and more extreme, which espouses a pro-Nazi ideology and is opposed to joining the EU, is not represented in parliament, but its leader Demytro Yarosh declared recently that his organization and Svoboda share many views and values," the paper stated. Incidentally, Yarosh was appointed in late February as the deputy head of the National Council for Defense and Security.

    In Paragraph 6 the Americans tried to contradict the words of the Russian president to the effect that ethnic Russians in Ukraine live in fear of the new government in Kiev, and stated that there are no reliable reports on that. They also presented the fact that the interim president of Ukraine, Oleksandr Turchynov, refused to approve a law limiting the use of the Russian language in the country, but forgot to mention that prior to that parliament had approved the law.

  • President Putin’s Fiction : 10 False Claims About Ukraine
    http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2014/03/222988.htm

    As Russia spins a false narrative to justify its illegal actions in Ukraine, the world has not seen such startling Russian fiction since Dostoyevsky wrote, “The formula ‘two times two equals five’ is not without its attractions.”

    Below are 10 of President Vladimir Putin’s recent claims justifying Russian aggression in the Ukraine, followed by the facts that his assertions ignore or distort.

    Pas forcément étonnant que nos médias ne traduisent pas la liste... C’est du niveau de la cour d’école.

    • 1. Mr. Putin says: Russian forces in Crimea are only acting to protect Russian military assets. It is “citizens’ defense groups,” not Russian forces, who have seized infrastructure and military facilities in Crimea.

      The Facts: Strong evidence suggests that members of Russian security services are at the heart of the highly organized anti-Ukraine forces in Crimea. While these units wear uniforms without insignia, they drive vehicles with Russian military license plates and freely identify themselves as Russian security forces when asked by the international media and the Ukrainian military. Moreover, these individuals are armed with weapons not generally available to civilians.

      2. Mr. Putin says: Russia’s actions fall within the scope of the 1997 Friendship Treaty between Ukraine and the Russian Federation.

      The Facts: The 1997 agreement requires Russia to respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity. Russia’s military actions in Ukraine, which have given them operational control of Crimea, are in clear violation of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and sovereignty.

      3. Mr. Putin says: The opposition failed to implement the February 21 agreement with former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych.

      The Facts: The February 21 agreement laid out a plan in which the Rada, or Parliament, would pass a bill to return Ukraine to its 2004 Constitution, thus returning the country to a constitutional system centered around its parliament. Under the terms of the agreement, Yanukovych was to sign the enacting legislation within 24 hours and bring the crisis to a peaceful conclusion. Yanukovych refused to keep his end of the bargain. Instead, he packed up his home and fled, leaving behind evidence of wide-scale corruption.

      4. Mr. Putin says: Ukraine’s government is illegitimate. Yanukovych is still the legitimate leader of Ukraine.

      The Facts: On March 4, President Putin himself acknowledged the reality that Yanukovych “has no political future.” After Yanukovych fled Ukraine, even his own Party of Regions turned against him, voting to confirm his withdrawal from office and to support the new government. Ukraine’s new government was approved by the democratically elected Ukrainian Parliament, with 371 votes – more than an 82% majority. The interim government of Ukraine is a government of the people, which will shepherd the country toward democratic elections on May 25th – elections that will allow all Ukrainians to have a voice in the future of their country.

      5. Mr. Putin says: There is a humanitarian crisis and hundreds of thousands are fleeing Ukraine to Russia and seeking asylum.

      The Facts: To date, there is absolutely no evidence of a humanitarian crisis. Nor is there evidence of a flood of asylum-seekers fleeing Ukraine for Russia. International organizations on the ground have investigated by talking with Ukrainian border guards, who also refuted these claims. Independent journalists observing the border have also reported no such flood of refugees.

      6. Mr. Putin says: Ethnic Russians are under threat.

      The Facts: Outside of Russian press and Russian state television, there are no credible reports of any ethnic Russians being under threat. The new Ukrainian government placed a priority on peace and reconciliation from the outset. President Oleksandr Turchynov refused to sign legislation limiting the use of the Russian language at regional level. Ethnic Russians and Russian speakers have filed petitions attesting that their communities have not experienced threats. Furthermore, since the new government was established, calm has returned to Kyiv. There has been no surge in crime, no looting, and no retribution against political opponents.

      7. Mr. Putin says: Russian bases are under threat.

      The Facts: Russian military facilities were and remain secure, and the new Ukrainian government has pledged to abide by all existing international agreements, including those covering Russian bases. It is Ukrainian bases in Crimea that are under threat from Russian military action.

      8. Mr. Putin says: There have been mass attacks on churches and synagogues in southern and eastern Ukraine.

      The Facts: Religious leaders in the country and international religious freedom advocates active in Ukraine have said there have been no incidents of attacks on churches. All of Ukraine’s church leaders, including representatives of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-Moscow Patriarchate, have expressed support for the new political leadership, calling for national unity and a period of healing. Jewish groups in southern and eastern Ukraine report that they have not seen an increase in anti-Semitic incidents.

      9. Mr. Putin says: Kyiv is trying to destabilize Crimea.

      The Facts: Ukraine’s interim government has acted with restraint and sought dialogue. Russian troops, on the other hand, have moved beyond their bases to seize political objectives and infrastructure in Crimea. The government in Kyiv immediately sent the former Chief of Defense to defuse the situation. Petro Poroshenko, the latest government emissary to pursue dialogue in Crimea, was prevented from entering the Crimean Rada.

      10. Mr. Putin says: The Rada is under the influence of extremists or terrorists.

      The Facts: The Rada is the most representative institution in Ukraine. Recent legislation has passed with large majorities, including from representatives of eastern Ukraine. Far-right wing ultranationalist groups, some of which were involved in open clashes with security forces during the EuroMaidan protests, are not represented in the Rada. There is no indication that the Ukrainian government would pursue discriminatory policies; on the contrary, they have publicly stated exactly the opposite.

    • Russian FM slams US report on Putin’s remarks on Ukraine as ‘double standards’
      http://en.itar-tass.com/russia/722469

      “We will not relegate ourselves to polemics with petty propaganda. We will only say that once again we have to deal with unacceptable arrogance and claims of ultimate truth. The U.S. has no and cannot have moral right to lecture others on how to comply with international rules and respect the sovereignty of other countries. What about the bombings of former Yugoslavia and the invasion of Iraq on falsified pretexts?” the statement said.

      “If we turn to more distant historical events, we can find many examples of American military interventions far away from the national borders in the absence of real threat to the security of the United States. The war in Vietnam claimed the lives of two million peaceful citizens, let alone the completely devastated country and the contaminated environment. Under the pretext of protecting their citizens, who had simply happened to be in conflict zones, the U.S. invaded Lebanon in 1958 and the Dominican Republic in 1965, attacked tiny Grenada in 1983, bombed Libya in 1986, and three years later occupied Panama. Nevertheless, they dare accuse Russia of ‘armed aggression’, when it steps in to defend its compatriots who make up the majority of Crimea’s population in order to prevent ultranationalist forces from organizing yet another Maidan bloodbath,” the ministry said.

    • From Washington to Moscow, everyone is lying about what’s happening in Ukraine
      http://www.haaretz.com/mobile/.premium-1.578397?v=46E241E032D2DB4C06BC1E868F8C9CB3

      Putin’s statement about the crisis was full of distortions and manipulations. But in an unusual paper meant to expose them, the U.S. State Department offered its own share of inaccuracies and half-truths.

      In Paragraph 3 the Americans seem to be choosing a very specific interpretation of the situation as it developed in Kiev late last month. “Mr. Putin says: ‘The opposition did not implement the February 21 agreement with former President Viktor Yanukovych.’ The facts: ‘The agreement presents a plan according to which the parliament must reinstate the 2004 constitution, as well as returning the country to a system that strengthens the legislative branch. Yanukovych was supposed to sign the legislation within 24 hours and to bring the crisis to an end peacefully. He refused to meet his commitment, and instead packed up the contents of his home and fled, and left behind evidence of extensive corruption,’” said the document.

      In effect, there was chaos in the Ukrainian capital, and a substantial percentage of the anti-Russian opposition demonstrators rejected the agreement formulated by the warring parties with the mediation of the European Union. The developments from the moment of the signing until Yanukovych’s flight and his ouster from parliament is not entirely clear, nor is it clear why mention of his ostensible corruption is relevant to the question of the legitimacy of removing him by force.

      In addition, the protest leaders still recognized him as president on February 25, and only said that he “is not actively leading the country as of now.”

      In Paragraph 4 the Americans deal with the legitimacy of the new government, and with Putin’s claim that Yanukovych is still Ukraine’s legitimate leader. The document of the State Department in Washington notes that on March 4 Putin himself said that the ousted president “has no political future,” and that his party, the Party of Regions, voted in favor of removing him and installing the new government, and that the parliament in Kiev confirmed the swearing in of the government by a huge majority of 82 percent.

      But the Obama administration ignored Paragraph 111 in the Ukrainian constitution, which states that parliament can oust the president only if he committed a crime. The initiation of an impeachment process must be approved by two-thirds of the legislators, with 75 percent of MPs voting in favor of the ousting itself. Those votes were not held, and therefore ratification of the new government, even with 82 percent support, was passed in contradiction of the constitution.

      In Paragraph 8 the State Department wrote: “Mr. Putin says: ‘There were mass attacks against churches and synagogues in southern and eastern Ukraine.’ The facts: ‘The religious leaders in the country and activists who favor freedom of religion said that there were no attacks against churches. All the leaders of the Church in Ukraine support the new political leadership and called for national unity. Jewish organizations in southern and eastern Ukraine reported that there was no increase in anti-Semitic incidents.”

      We found no evidence of attacks against churches in Ukraine, but in Haaretz we have already reported on a fear in the Jewish communities of an increase in anti-Semitism, as well as several incidents in which extreme right-wing gangs intensified their activity against synagogues and Jewish institutions. Our correspondent in Crimea, Anshel Pfeffer, reported that Jews were beaten in Kiev and a synagogue was destroyed there, and similar incidents occurred in the city of Zaporozhye in southeast Ukraine and in the Crimean capital of Simferopol.

      Despite that, many pointed to the fact that Russia is trying to defame the new government in Kiev by portraying it as extremely rightist, anti-Semitic and Nazi in its entirety, and some people even wondered whether those incidents weren’t Russian provocations, in order to arouse opposition to the new government. Whatever the case, it can’t really be said that there were no anti-Semitic incidents at all in southeast Ukraine.

      In the last paragraph, Paragraph 10, the United States claimed that Putin is lying about the fact that the Ukrainian parliament is influenced by extremists and terrorists. The Americans claim that the Rada (parliament) is the institution most representative of the Ukrainian public, and that extreme-right organizations that were involved in the clashes in Independence Square are not represented in it.

      But the actual situation differs significantly from the picture Washington is trying to paint. It’s true that legislators from the pro-Russian parties voted in favor of the new government, but we cannot ignore the fact that many of their members fled from Kiev, so that it is hard to claim that the parliament provides optimal representation for the pro-Russian east. In addition, the far-right party Svoboda (Liberty) received 38 seats in the legislature in the most recent elections, and its members espouse extreme anti-Semitic and nationalist views.

      In addition, the party received five portfolios in the new government, including justice minister and deputy prime minister. “The Right Sector, a small organization, armed and more extreme, which espouses a pro-Nazi ideology and is opposed to joining the EU, is not represented in parliament, but its leader Demytro Yarosh declared recently that his organization and Svoboda share many views and values," the paper stated. Incidentally, Yarosh was appointed in late February as the deputy head of the National Council for Defense and Security.

      In Paragraph 6 the Americans tried to contradict the words of the Russian president to the effect that ethnic Russians in Ukraine live in fear of the new government in Kiev, and stated that there are no reliable reports on that. They also presented the fact that the interim president of Ukraine, Oleksandr Turchynov, refused to approve a law limiting the use of the Russian language in the country, but forgot to mention that prior to that parliament had approved the law.

    • From Washington to Moscow and Kiev, everyone is lying about what’s happening in Ukraine

      Je trouve le mot « mensonge » exagéré pour la matière qui nous intéresse, ie la géopolitique. Les points de vue diffèrent, certes. Mais parler de mensonge fait plus penser à une volonté de clore tout débat, à la façon dont on évoque le point Godwin à tous propos.

      Et... les occidentaux sont, amtha, particulièrement minables dans l’affaire. Car la narrative du peuple victorieux a sérieusement du plomb dans l’aile, avec toute la documentation sur les nouveaux membres du gouvernement Ukrainien, sur les partis qui les soutiennent, et sur les mensonges au sujet des massacres lors de ce qu’il est difficile de ne pas nommer coup d’état. Et donc, je trouve les occidentaux très silencieux sur ce sujet. Limites merdeux. Ce nouveau précédent dans le « 2 poids 2 mesures » sera-t-il celui qui mettra un terme à la relative impunité de l’occident ces 20 dernières années (et plus) ?

      De plus en plus se dessine un monde « à la XIXème siècle », où les élites du monde entier font et défont les alliances, se font la guerre ici ou là, pour un bout de terre gorgé de ressources, et en entraînant les peuples derrière eux.

      Les Nations unies ne sont jamais plus efficaces que lorsque règne la crainte du nucléaire. C’est malheureux. Et j’ai cru lire que les américains envoyaient leurs bateaux vers la Crimée. Pour y faire quoi à part faire augmenter la pression ?

    • Pour les navires, ils n’étaient sans doute pas loin, puisque les É.-U. avaient envoyé deux unités pour « assister » les Russes dans la protection des JO…

      Et pas n’importe quoi,
      • le USS Taylor, frégate lance-missile (qui s’y est d’ailleurs échouée, le 12/02, en entrant dans le port turc de Samsun (l’ancienne Amisos)
      • et surtout le USS Mount Whitney, « navire de commandement », mais surtout navire espion, comme on peut le constater en comptant ses oreilles…

      Il est d’ailleurs un habitué de ces eaux, puisqu’il était déjà là pour les événements de Géorgie en 2008…