#lustration

  • Poroshenko to sign #lustration bill, amendments possible
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/poroshenko-to-sign-lustration-bill-amendments-possible-366890.html

    President Petro Poroshenko on Oct. 3 said he would sign into law a bill introducing comprehensive lustration of former top officials of his predecessor Viktor Yanukovych’s regime and former Soviet functionaries.

    But Poroshenko said that, before signing the legislation, he would consider recommendations of the Venice Commission, the Constitutional Court, the Council of Europe and the European Court of Human Rights. He added that he did not rule out amendments to the bill.

    The bill, called the Law on the Cleansing of Government, fulfills one of the key demands of the EuroMaidan revolution, which ousted Yanukovych on Feb. 22. The measure follows months of pressure by civil society, with EuroMaidan activists holding regular rallies for lustration and even burning tires near the Verkhovna Rada building to persuade it to pass the bill.

    I have decided to sign the bill,” Poroshenko said on Twitter. “Lustration will happen! The state apparatus will be purged of KGB agents and top Party of Regions apparatchiks!
    (…)
    Viktoriya Voitytska, who is running on the list of the Volya party in the upcoming parliamentary election, said by phone that the bill was a result of a compromise, and, if supporters of lustration had not made some concessions, it would have taken ages to adopt the bill. Volya, headed by major pro-lustration activist Yegor Sobolev, has been vehemently pushing for lustration.

    Then the Trash Bucket Challenge would have led to complete anarchy,” Voitytska said, referring to EuroMaidan activists’ recent practice of throwing officials linked to Yanukovych’s regime into trash containers, sometimes referred to as the “street lustration.

    Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk said in September that the bill would apply to about 1 million people.

    On peut certainement faire confiance aux « activistes d’Euro-Maïdan » pour ne pas rester dans les limites du compromis négocié.

    La loi est faite sur mesure pour exclure Porochenko lui-même du champ d’application,…

    The bill prohibits top officials who worked under Yanukovych from being appointed to government positions for five to 10 years.

    The ban applies to those who held top government jobs in 2010 to 2014 for at least a year and those who held offices during the EuroMaidan revolution in November 2013 to February 2014 and did not quit of their own accord.

    These include ministers, heads of government agencies, top judges, top prosecutors, members of the General Staff, governors, top officials of regional administrations and heads of some state companies.

    The prohibition also applies to functionaries of the Soviet Union’s Communist Party and Communist Youth League, as well as employees or agents of the KGB, graduates of KGB-run universities, agents of other countries’ intelligence agencies and those who have called for infringing on Ukraine’s territorial integrity.

    However, former top officials of the Yanukovych regime will still have a right to hold elected offices like those of president and members of parliament. Nor will the law affect rank-and-file employees of government agencies and the police.

    That is why Poroshenko, who was head of the central bank in 2007 to 2012 and economic development and trade minister in 2012, is not subject to lustration.

  • Police warn Ukrainian against throwing politicians into garbage containers
    http://zik.ua/en/news/2014/09/27/police_warn_ukrainian_against_throwing_politicians_into_garbage_containers_52720

    The interior ministry has called on all participants of the pre-election campaign to stick to civilized behavior and stop throwing officials and politicians into garbage containers.

    A wave of incidents involving officials and politicians has snowballed in Ukraine recently, with protesters forcefully throwing them into garbage containers. In several cases, the protesters delivered the containers close to offices.

    Some officials were kept in evil-smelling containers for up to 20 minutes.

    Decrying police inaction, protesters call their actions ‘people’s lustration’ of corrupt officials or those who collaborated with the Yanukovych regime.

    The police warned Ukrainians that any such actions will be classified as law violations and are inadmissible during election campaigning.

    Le succès médiatique de ces actions, notamment auprès de la presse occidentale, a un effet boule de neige. Bizarre…

    • Un des derniers en date,…

      Frustrated over lack of justice, Ukrainians throw officials in trash (VIDEO)
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/frustrated-over-lack-of-justice-ukrainians-throw-officials-to-trash-video-

      Covered in red paint and sitting in the middle of a pile of rubbish on a cold pavement in the darkness, Viktor Pylypyshyn endured insults instead of celebrating his registration as a candidate for parliamentary election as he intended on the night of Sept. 25.
      (…)
      The assault on Pylypyshyn took place as he tried to register as a parliamentary candidate. An angry mob attacked him close to the Central Election Commission and threw him in a trash bin.

      Le Kyiv Post a une lecture plutôt partiale (et « pro-lustration ») des faits qu’on peut percevoir sur la vidéo.

      La angry mob a l’air de désigner quelques nervis d’extrême-droite, jamais filmés d’ailleurs,…

      Quant à Pylypyshyn qui est venu, seul, s’inscrire à la Commission électorale comme candidat dans une circonscription, c’est un député non-inscrit, élu le 15/12/13 à Kiev en battant un adversaire de… Svoboda

      Pylypyshyn wins a set in the Rada
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/pylypyshyn-wins-a-set-in-the-rada-333793.html

      With 100% of the ballots of precinct election commissions counted, self-nominee, head of Kyiv Residents Above All organization Viktor Pylypyshyn won the repeat parliamentary elections in Ukraine at constituency No. 223 in Shevchenkivsky district in Kyiv.

      According to the figures published on the Web site of the Central Election Commission, he scored 44.89% of the vote, whereas his closest rival – nominee of the Svoboda All-Ukrainian Union Yuriy Levchenko received 40.58% of the vote.

      La lustration a bon dos : méthodes #fascistes.

    • Et d’abord, c’est lui, enfin son garde du corps, qui avait commencé,…

      Latest from OSCE Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) to Ukraine based on information received as of 18:00 (Kyiv time), 1 October 2014 | OSCE
      http://www.osce.org/ukraine-smm/124979

      The SMM attended in Odessa a press conference of the Euromaidan co-ordination council. Representatives of self-defence groups, #Right_Sector and the #Lustration Committee gave their views on the incident involving the former Minister of Emergency and Member of Parliament who had come to the city to hold a press briefing, as part of his election campaign (see Daily Report 1 October). The man was beaten up by a small crowd outside the Odessa regional administration building on 30 September. Two of the speakers stated that the fight outside the administration building had started because the former Minister of Emergency’s bodyguard had hit a Euromaidan activist. Odessa self-defence leader said that if the police attempt to arrest the activists who had hit the man, the security situation may deteriorate. He also said that the self-defence activists will march on Kulikovo Pole square this Sunday and advised the anti-Maidan activists, who regularly gather there, to stay away from the square.

  • Ukrainian President Poroshenko will visit White House, Congress to seek more aid - The Washington Post
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/ukraine-president-poroshenko-visits-white-house-congress-in-aid-bid/2014/09/17/d8e0e0b5-1917-437d-89ea-88fe8e9e451b_story.html

    Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko will arrive in Washington on Thursday with a simple request: more economic and military aid for a nation that is reeling from an insurgency in the east.

    But amid concerns about Ukraine’s commitment to anti-corruption efforts and Western caution about escalating a military conflict with Russia, it remained far from clear that Ukraine’s leader would leave Washington with a substantial new pledge of support. The Ukrainian candy-magnate-turned-politician plans to talk with President Obama at the White House and will address a joint meeting of Congress.

    Après s’être adressé au parlement canadien hier, P. Porochenko rencontrera B. Obama et s’adressera au Congrès. À Ottawa, il a remporté de vifs applaudissements de la part des honorables parlementaires et peut-être (?) d’autres résultats plus concrets.

    With Poroshenko seeking more aid in Washington, some Ukrainians have questioned whether the country is ready to receive it, given long-running problems with corruption that have plagued Ukraine since it broke from the Soviet Union in 1991.

    Those concerns with corruption were a key focus of the winter pro-European protests in Kiev, but there are increasing worries that little has been done to combat it in the seven months since the pro-Russian Viktor Yanukovych was deposed as president.

    The slow pace of anti-corruption measures has frustrated some activists. Protesters burned tires in front of the Ukrainian parliament this week to demand that it pass legislation to strengthen scrutiny of officials who served under Ukraine’s previous leadership. A version of the measure eventually was approved after several cycles of votes.

    Other attempts at anti-corruption legislation have been rejected, and an ombudsman who was tasked with spearheading a fight against graft resigned in frustration in August.

    The general sense is that corruption is just as bad as before,” said Anders Aslund, an economist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has advised Ukrainian leaders on economic issues.

    La corruption en Ukraine ne fait guère de doute, avant, comme maintenant et, probablement après… La lutte contre la corruption est un thème plutôt consensuel, du moins dans les déclarations…, mais aussi un cheval de bataille de l’extrême droite.

    Certes, some activists. Protesters burned tires in front of the Ukrainian parliament this week to demand that it pass legislation to strengthen scrutiny et ont mis à la poubelle un député (triomphe médiatique dans les médias occidentaux). Il faut peut être préciser que le thème de la #lustration est actuellement LE grand thème de #Svoboda et que les « activistes » en question sont des membres de ce parti d’extrême droite.

    Cf. l’article du Kyiv Post sur cette manifestation, le 16 septembre


    Svoboda lawmaker Ihor Miroshnychenko (R) during a rally to support the lustration law in front of the parliament building in Kyiv on Sept. 16.
    © Volodymyr Petrov

    Ukrainians rally to support lustration law in parliament
    http://www.kyivpost.com/multimedia/photo/rally-to-support-the-lustration-law-in-front-of-the-parliament-building-in

    About 250 people under the Rada require a law on lustration in Kyiv, on Sept. 16. In front of the Verkhovna Rada activists held a picket demanding passage of the law. There were flags of Ukraine, flags with symbols of the Svoboda party, Right Sector and placards with slogans: “We demand lustration”.

  • Latest from OSCE Special Monitoring Mission (SMM) to Ukraine based on information received as of 18:00 (Kyiv time), 1 September 2014 | OSCE
    http://www.osce.org/ukraine-smm/123117

    The SMM attended the opening of a school in Luhansk, at which the self-declared “LPR president”, Igor Plotnitsky, held a speech. Plotnitsky said that the new curriculum would be based on the educational curriculum of the Russian Federation. Furthermore, he said that there were plans to replace the Ukrainian Hryvnia (UAH) currency with the Russian Rouble. According to the self-declared “LPR president”, civil servants had not been paid, but there were plans to resume the payment of their salaries as of 1 October, possibly from Russian sources.

    Different interlocutors, including local inhabitants and the regional co-ordinator of Ukraine’s “Anti-Terrorism Operation (ATO)”, told the SMM on 1 September that Luhansk airport was no longer under control of the Ukrainian forces.

    During the dark hours on 31 August and on 1 September throughout the day, the SMM heard little shelling in Donetsk, suggesting a possible decreased intensity of the fighting in and around the city. On 1 September the SMM monitored the situation around Donetsk airport, from a distance of around one kilometre. The SMM heard three to four mortar shells, repeated every five to ten minutes, outgoing from within the airport area.
    (…)
    The SMM continued to monitor the situation in Mariupol (113 km south of Donetsk). At a checkpoint to the direction of Vinogradne (to the east of Mariupol), the SMM was told by a Ukrainian officer that Bezimenne town (33 km east of Mariupol), was currently under the control of irregular armed groups. (…) The Donetsk region deputy commander of the Ukrainian border guards confirmed to the SMM that on 31 August two Ukrainian coastal border guard boats were attacked in the Sea of Azov from the area of Bezimenne village.
    (…)
    The SMM attended a meeting between the mayor of Lviv and 20 parents of soldiers, mainly serving at Luhansk Airport as well as representatives of the army and the local Military Commissariat. The relatives asked for the immediate rotation of soldiers who have been serving there since 8 March. The mayor pledged to discuss the matter of rotation with the government representatives.

    In Kyiv the SMM observed a number of protests throughout the city. Some 30 activists, many of them members of the volunteer “Mirotvorets” battalion under the Ministry of Internal Affairs, were demonstrating in front of the Shevchenko District Police Department. The demonstrators included soldiers who recently escaped from an encirclement of irregular armed groups around the town of Ilovaisk in the Donetsk region. The protesters were complaining about the conduct of the ATO in the east. In front of the parliament building, the SMM observed a gathering of around 20 people, organized by the political party “Volya”. Demonstrators held party flags and signs calling for #lustration of Parliament. Finally the SMM monitored a gathering of about 50 people, mostly women, relatives of ATO soldiers, held in front of the Presidential Administration building. Their demands included the rotation of personnel and proper equipment. Approximately 15 law enforcement officers from the police and National Guard were present at the location.