person:yulia tymoshenko

  • 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

  • Fiala, EBA president and Dragon Capital CEO, says ’patience is thin’
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/fiala-eba-president-and-dragon-capital-ceo-says-patience-is-thin-393118.ht

    Tomas Fiala, president of the European Business Association and CEO of Dragon Capital in Kyiv, is determined not to let the promise of another revolution slip away from Ukraine.

    I would hate for the 2005 post-Orange Revolution to repeat itself,” Fiala said, referring to the unsuccessful rule of President Viktor Yushchenko and Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, which opened the way to Viktor Yanukovych’s election as president in 2010.

    Fiala, however, fears the promise of reform is yet again in danger of fading away more than a year after the end of the EuroMaidan Revolution that prompted Yanukovych to take refuge in Russia, along with other former top officials suspected of crimes ranging from mass murder to stealing billions of dollars from Ukraine.

    Patience is thin, especially if nobody gets punished for corruption and people are getting poorer while others are getting richer who are close to the current leadership,” Fiala said in a recent Kyiv Post interview.

    L’un des représentants des investisseurs européens trouvent que rien ne change et que les copains du pouvoir en place s’en mettent plein les poches…

  • New book attempts to fill white spots in EuroMaidan history
    http://www.kyivpost.com/guide/books/new-book-attempts-to-fill-white-spots-in-euromaidan-history-383746.html

    The most recent book on Ukraine’s year-old revolution is called “EuroMaidan. The Untold Story”. And its author, a well-known Ukrainian journalist Sonya Koshkina, attempts to do just that: tell the story that happened behind the scenes.
    In her ultimate guide to those events Koshkina tells about former President Viktor Yanukovych’s fear of his political opponent Yulia Tymoshenko, what his regime did to wreak havoc among the protesters, and put an end to the revolution.
    (…)
    While the author attempts to show some dark sides of the EuroMaidan revolution, the book omits some other important details. One of these is a secret meeting between Dmytro Yarosh, leader of the far right groups of EuroMaidan protesters, and Yanukovych on Feb. 20. Yarosh became a prominent leader of the revolution during the late stages of the revolution and unsucessfully ran for president last May. He was later elected to parliament.

    Koshkina describes in details Tymoshenko’s visit to Maidan on Feb. 22, the day she was released from prison, but fails to mention that most of the protesters were not happy with her arrival and welcomed Tymoshenko with shouts “we were not here because of you.” Such gaps in the story about EuroMaidan may disappoint some of the meticulous readers. The book also fails to make it any clearer who gave and executed the order to murder the protesters during Feb. 18-20, and before those bloody events that killed more than 100 people.

  • Anniversaire du début de #Maïdan : signature de l’accord de coalition

    Pro-Western parties sign historic coalition agreement
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/kyiv/pro-western-parties-sign-historic-coalition-agreement-372667.html

    One year after the start of the EuroMaidan Revolution that drove President Viktor Yanukovych from power on Feb. 21, five political parties elected on Oct. 26 to Ukraine’s parliament have signed a coalition agreement bringing the country closer to the West and committing it to pursuing European Union integration and NATO membership. 

    Five of the six parties parties elected to the Rada in the Oct. 26 parliamentary election joined the broad coalition, including the Bloc of President Petro Poroshenko, the People’s Front led by Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Samopomich (Self-Help) party, Oleh Lyashko’s Radical Party and Batkivshchyna led by ex-Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko. 

    Only two of the parties, Batkivshcyhna and the Radical Party, existed a year ago.


    Yulia Tymoshenko, Oleh Lyashko, Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Volodymyr Groysman signed the coalition agreement on Nov. 21, the one year anniversary of the start of the EuroMaidan protests.
    © batkivshchyna.com.ua

    An obvious question is why, given the huge pressures being felt now on Ukraine, did it take reform politicians more than one month after parliamentary elections to forge this coalition,” said Timothy Ash, head of emerging market research for Standard Bank in London.

    In the coming weeks one of the main tests for the new parliament is whether it can resist the backdoor deals and political horse trading that have defined previous Ukrainian parliaments.

    #c'est_y_pas_beau ?
    et
    #maquignonnage

  • Friends For Now : Can Poroshenko, Yatsenyuk work together ?
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/can-poroshenko-yatseyuk-work-together-370145.html

    The question on many minds after the election is whether the winners of the Oct. 26 election will be able to work together and advance a reform agenda to overhaul Ukraine’s fragile democracy and economy. 

    There is no clear answer to that yet.

    On Oct. 29, both top winners of the election, President Petro Poroshenko’s Bloc and President Arseniy Yatsenyuk’s Front of Change, presented competing drafts of an agreement to unite forces into a ruling coalition.

    While Poroshenko’s Bloc won the biggest number of seats, thanks to a strong showing in the single-mandate constituencies, Yatsenyuk’s party had the highest score in the party race. Altogether, six parties crossed the 5 percent threshold to get into parliament. With the many new faces, an assortment of holdovers or new legislators who supported the fugitive former President Viktor Yanukovych also got elected.

    Poroshenko’s version of the coalition agreement was a 50-page document that outlined plans across the spectrum, everything from battling corruption to pension reform.

    But Yatsenyuk, who is expected to keep his job, proposed his own just a few hours later. His plan was more concise, just 2.5 pages. It’s called the European Ukraine, and implies that the plan is basically to fulfill the nation’s commitments to change that came with the signing of the Association Agreement, a comprehensive trade-and-political pact with the European Union. In addition, Yatsenyuk presented a list of 36 laws that need to be adopted.

    This battle of platforms was one of the first signs that relations between Poroshenko and Yatsenyuk are far from smooth and raised fears that their rivalry might turn destructive.

    Maintenant que les camps se sont comptés (les deux chefs sont à égalité 1 partout), les choses sérieuses commencent…
    La pêche aux « indépendants » doit battre son plein et les intéressés doivent négocier les contre-parties, tout en braillant sur la nécessité de lutter contre la corruption (… du régime précédent !)

    • D’ailleurs, en parlant du régime précédent, justement…

      Will new parliament stay wedded to interests of oligarchs ?
      http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/will-new-parliament-stay-wedded-to-interests-of-oligarchs-370147.html

      The question now remaining is to what extent big business interests will clash with state-building endeavors that should include open and rules-based markets, the rule of law and respect for property rights.

      Avec une revue des oligarques restant (ou revenant) au parlement.

      Although never elected to parliament, chemicals tycoon Dmytro Firtash has had close associates in power and in the legislature. In the previous decade he played a major role in importing Russian natural gas to Ukraine. He currently is the nation’s leading nitrogen fertilizer producer.

      Yuriy Boyko, the former energy minister who was Firtash’s power-of-attorney in the past, got elected with the Opposition Bloc, a newly formed political force that is a reincarnation of the former ruling Party of Regions. Firtash’s former business partner in gas trader RosUkrEnergo, Ivan Fursin, got elected in a single-seat district in Odesa Oblast. Yevhen Bakulin, the former CEO of state-owned Naftogaz when Boyko was energy minister, successfully ran in a Luhansk Oblast constituency. Serhiy Lyovochkin, with whom Firtash co-owns the Inter television channel, also got in with the Opposition Bloc.

      I have close relations with (Opposition Bloc leader Yuriy) Boyko, we’re friends. With Seryozha (Serhiy Lyovochkin) too, for many years,” Firtash said in an Oct. 20 interview with Lb.ua conducted in Vienna where he is awaiting extradition to the U.S. on racketeering charges.

      (…)

      Opposition Bloc remains the biggest hope of oligarchs like Firtash and Rinat Akhmetov, the nation’s richest man, who made his $10.5 billion fortune, by Bloomberg estimates, on energy and metallurgy. Former Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Vilkul got elected with the Opposition Bloc – he formerly ran several companies belonging to Akhmetov’s System Management Capital.

      (…)

      Former Russian citizen Vadim Novinsky, worth an estimated $1.4 billion, is a member of the Opposition Bloc too, as well as Vadim Rabinovych, whose fortune was valued at $255 million before the 2008-2009 economic crisis, according to Focus, a weekly magazine. Novinsky voted for the so-called “dictator laws” on Jan. 16 at the height of the EuroMaidan Revolution that severely curbed civil liberties.

      The bloc’s seventh spot was Nestor Shufrych, who controls 25 percent of Naftogazvydobuvannya, a major privately-owned oil and gas producer, according to an investigation by The Insider, a Ukrainian website. He also voted for the January draconian laws.

      (…)

      Former energy oligarch Yulia Tymoshenko re-enters parliament as a leader of Batkivshchyna party. She has been known for her personal opposition to Firtash. “Please notice, I haven’t touched her. It’s she who waged war against me. Why, I don’t understand. I didn’t have a business with her, I didn’t share any money with her. No intersection points,” Firtash said in the Lb.ua interview.

      Ihor Kolomoisky, the billionaire Dnipropetrovsk governor who controls the country’s largest bank, Privat, and several major assets in energy and metals, tried to reach an agreement with populist politician Oleh Lyashko, whose Radical Party received 7.4 percent of the votes, according to The Insider. However, Kolomoisky didn’t succeed and is looking for another parliamentary force for support.

      (…)

      Breaking up Naftogaz and selling large stakes to private investors has been on the agenda of current Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk. This issue will likely lead to conflicts between oligarchs vying for control of the company, especially its profitable gas transportation and storage system. Kolomoisky is close to Yatsenyuk’s People’s Front as well as to Samopomich and several members of Poroshenko’s Bloc, according to Fesenko. His deputy governor, Borys Filatov, got elected in a single-seat district of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.

      (…)

      Billionare Viktor Pinchuk owns a major pipe-making business and is also close to Yatsenyuk, Fesenko says. Pinchuk didn’t respond too.

      (…)

      Meanwhile, Samopomich’s leader Andriy Sadovy, the mayor of Lviv who refused to take a seat in the Rada, can be seen as a business-related figure too, despite Samopomich’s numerous statements about being absolutely independent of any businesses. Sadovy controls Lux, a radio and television company in western Ukraine, through his wife. The company’s key asset is Channel 24, a popular television station. Since Lux, like the rest of the local media market, is unlikely to make earnings, Sadovy needs to subsidize it.

      En résumé,…

      Volodymyr Ohryzko, the nation’s former foreign minister who failed to get a seat in the Rada, wrote in a blog recently: “In society’s conscience, parliament remains a place where one should go to ‘resolve (their own business) problems’ rather than write laws.

  • Poroshenko Bloc, candidates tied to Yanukovych may dominate new parliament
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/next-parliament-expected-to-be-less-stable-even-if-dominated-by-poroshenko

    According to a poll conducted by the Democratic Initiatives Foundation on Sept. 12-21, 26.9 of those who are planning to vote will choose the Poroshenko Bloc, while Oleh Lyashko’s populist Radical Party was the runner-up with 6.2 percent and former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s Batkivshchyna got 5.5 percent.

    Former Defense Minister Anatoliy Hrytsenko’s Civil Position, the People’s Front and the nationalist Svoboda party are expected to get 4.6 percent, 3.9 percent and 3.3 percent, respectively. Outsiders included the Communist Party with 3 percent, Kyiv Mayor Vitaly Klitshchko’s UDAR with 2.8 percent, former Deputy Prime Minister Sergiy Tigipko’s Strong Ukraine with 2.8 percent and Lviv Mayor Andriy Sadovy’s Samopomich with 1.7 percent.

    UDAR will participate in the election as part of the Poroshenko Bloc.
    Berezovets said that the Poroshenko Bloc was likely to control close to half of the next parliament.

    Pas de gros changements par rapport au sondage d’il y a 15 jours pour la partie proportionnelle. http://seenthis.net/messages/295011

    L’extrême droite reste stable, avec une petite progression de Svoboda au détriment de O. Lyachko. Les résultats ne sont pas très compréhensibles pour l’UDAR de Klitchko, normalement membre du Bloc Porochenko et dont l’estimation n’était pas fournie indépendamment lors du dernier sondage.

    L’article suggère que les circonscriptions uninominales à un tour donnent une meilleure chance aux députés « d’ancien régime » de se faire réélire. Et prédit une chambre instable et ingouvernable…

    Et je n’ai pas trouvé le document sur le site du SOCIS…

  • ‘War’ and ‘peace’ factions split Ukraine politics - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/37164582-3ce1-11e4-871d-00144feabdc0.html?siteedition=intl

    Since the ceasefire, two camps have materialised – a “party of peace” around President Petro Poroshenko, and the “party of war” associated with Arseniy Yatseniuk, prime minister, and Yulia Tymoshenko, the former premier.
    The divisions may partly reflect competing ambitions ahead of the October 26 parliamentary poll, which is intended to sweep away remaining vestiges of the Yanukovich era.
    Some even suggest Mr Poroshenko and Mr Yatseniuk are in a calculated “good cop, bad cop” act. They may aim to signal to Mr Putin, who is facing deepening western sanctions and a potential backlash over Russian soldiers’ corpses returning from Ukraine, that he is better to deal with Mr Poroshenko than allow the “war” faction to gain ground.
    But the split became concrete last week after Mr Yatseniuk pulled out of talks to stand on the president’s party list in the elections. He unveiled his own “Popular Front” party, including commanders of some volunteer battalions in east Ukraine. These are composed partly of far-right activists who came to the fore when the winter protests turned violent.
    Speaking separately at a weekend conference in Kiev, the two leaders differed sharply in tone. Mr Poroshenko admitted the peace process had its doubters. “But from day to day, more people start to believe that we will be successful [on] this very difficult [path],” he said.
    Mr Yatseniuk said Ukraine could never trust a Russian president whose “goal is to take the entire Ukraine”.

    Intéressante analyse. Une des clés pour expliquer le report de l’application de l’accord d’association avec l’UE ?

    Sur les copains d’extrême-droite de Iatseniouk, voir la jolie brochette pointée hier http://seenthis.net/messages/293493

  • UK banks in row over Yulia Tymoshenko ’millions’
    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/exclusive-uk-banks-in-row-over-yulia-tymoshenko-millions-9177693.html

    #oligarque mais notre oligarque.

    Prominent UK banks are at the centre of a dispute over allegations that numerous foreign accounts were set up in the name of former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and her family. A leaked report, seen by The Independent, claims that 85 bank accounts containing millions of pounds were linked to Ms Tymoshenko and relatives.