Ukraine: Caught between East and West

[Ukraine’s dilemma is much greater than just the problems of one Eastern European nation—it is the second crisis of communism.  It is the final contest between the dictators (who have inherited the splintered remains of the former Soviet Union) and the democratic changes which the new rulers of the temporarily liberated communist union have allowed their people to have.  The emergency measures of temporarily replacing some of the new dictators with Western-supplied democrats in Ukraine, as well as in some of The Stans, is being reversed.  Ukraine, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan are faced with some severe choices to be made, whether they will place all of their bets upon East or West may not alter their eventual return to the new union of CIS states, but it might affect their status within that new organization.  We are witnesses to the birthing of Putin’s union, whether it takes wings and soars to become something much greater than the promised “workers’ paradise,” or a shallow reflection of its former Soviet self, remains to be seen.  That is what the great bet will be upon, the future shape of the new Eurasian Union—a blessing, or a curse upon humanity?]

Ukraine: Caught between East and West

By Laura Smith-Spark, CNN

Demonstrators take to the streets of Kiev in March to call for the release of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

Demonstrators take to the streets of Kiev in March to call for the release of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko.

(CNN) — Seven and a half years ago, scenes of jubilant crowds celebrating the outcome of Ukraine’s Orange Revolution — a new presidential vote after a rigged election was annulled — filled TV screens around the world.

Now the country is back in the headlines, thanks to the controversial detention of former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, a heroine of the revolution, and threats to boycott next month’s Euro 2012 soccer matches in response.

Viktor Yanukovych, the man defeated in 2004 by rival Viktor Yushchenko, is now president and stands accused by critics of persecuting his political opponents, Tymoshenko among them.

And the promise of the 2004 Orange Revolution, where millions joined in peaceful protest against alleged corruption and in defense of democracy, is judged to have turned sour.

So what happened? And where will Ukraine, a country of some 46 million people sandwiched between Russia and Eastern Europe, go next?

Key to Ukraine’s future are its troubled relationships with Russia and Europe — and the vexed question of its natural gas supply.

And with parliamentary elections due this October, the pressure is on Yanukovych to do what it takes to keep his Party of Regions in power.

Analysts agree that the seeds of Ukraine’s current political disarray were sown soon after the pro-Western Orange Revolution swept Yushchenko and the glamorous Tymoshenko, famous for her blond braid, into power.

"The Orange Revolution progressed Ukraine along the path of free elections and media pluralism," said Dr. Taras Kuzio, senior fellow for the Washington-based Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Relations.

"It never really got to grips with the two more fundamental issues of rule of law and corruption."

Yushchenko failed to deal with Soviet-style corruption in the judiciary, prosecutor’s office and security services, said Kuzio, and "these institutions are now being used by counterrevolutionaries to basically take their revenge."

Tymoshenko even more of a threat in defeat

The president and his prime minister, Tymoshenko, also failed to live up to their promises while in power.

"The Orange Revolution was an unvarnished disappointment because they fell to squabbling and settling old scores almost as soon as they got into power, and the personality politics wrecked the whole government," said Nicholas Redman, senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies.

"The vote for Yanukovych was a clear sign of the disappointment of unfulfilled promises from the Orange Revolution."

When Yanukovych beat Tymoshenko in the 2010 presidential contest, he and his supporters believed it was justice after the 2004 election was, in their eyes, stolen from them, Kuzio said.

But he won by a margin of only 3%, making the self-confident blonde, known for her fiery speeches, appear even more of a threat than before — and Yanukovych more determined to consolidate power, Kuzio said.

Last October, Tymoshenko was sentenced to seven years in prison after being convicted of abuse of authority over a natural gas deal negotiated with Russia in 2009. More criminal charges, including murder, are in the works and cases have also been filed against other opposition politicians.

Many see Tymoshenko’s imprisonment as motivated by political revenge and a desire to put the country’s leading opposition figure out of the picture. The Ukrainian government denies that is the case, saying justice has been served.

Viktor Yanukovych\'s camp regarded the 2010 victory as justice for what they believe was a stolen election in 2004.

Viktor Yanukovych’s camp regarded the 2010 victory as justice for what they believe was a stolen election in 2004.

But her incarceration, followed by her decision to go on hunger strike to protest her medical care and an alleged beating in prison, have exposed how far the country still has to go to live up to Western expectations on justice and human rights.

When German Chancellor Angela Merkel threatened to boycott the Euro 2012 matches to be played in Ukraine — some in Kharkiv, where Tymoshenko is jailed — in protest at her treatment, other European figures quickly followed suit.

In another big embarrassment for Yanukovych, a summit of Central European leaders set to take place this month in Yalta, southern Ukraine, was called off after 13 of the 20 invited leaders threatened to boycott it, Kuzio said.

And a so-called Association Agreement with the European Union — which if signed would bring closer ties and economic benefits to Ukraine — has been put on hold for as long as Tymoshenko remains in prison.

A high-stakes balancing act for the president

All this leads to the question of what Yanukovych does next.

The president is in a difficult position because any admission that Tymoshenko was jailed last October on trumped-up charges will threaten his own grip on power, Redman said.

If he cannot turn to Europe, Yanukovych must look instead to Russia as an ally, unless he wants Ukraine to wither in isolation.

But although commonly described as pro-Moscow, Yanukovych is better considered as first of all pro-Ukraine, analysts say, and ties to Moscow are fraught with their own risks to his homeland.

At the heart of Ukraine’s relationship with Russia are its former status as part of the Soviet Union and the reliance of its industrial sector on Russia’s vast reserves of natural gas, said Dr. Igor Sutyagin, a research fellow in Russian studies at the Royal United Services Institute, a London-based think tank.

People in Ukraine, which became independent in 1991, want to feel separate from Russia and dislike the perception that they are in Moscow’s pocket, Sutyagin said.

But leaders in the Kremlin are keen to keep Ukraine within Russia’s sphere of influence — and one way to keep it in line is through the control of natural gas supplies, a perennial source of conflict between the two countries.

Much of the natural gas supply of Eastern Europe flows through Ukrainian-owned pipelines from Russia’s Gazprom, leading to fury in Europe in 2006 and 2009 when Moscow shut off supplies in the height of winter during contract battles with Ukraine.

At the time the gas deal was signed by Tymoshenko and Russia’s Vladimir Putin in 2009, tensions between all parties were high and a resolution to the crisis was urgently needed.

With hindsight, Tymoshenko did not strike a great deal for Ukraine, analysts say, but that is partly to do with market fluctuations, and they consider it should be seen as a political error, not a criminal offense.

Nonetheless, the price had steadily climbed by the time Yanukovych was elected and the country’s industry was feeling the pain.

‘Big brother’ mentality still reigns in Russia

In Ukraine, business and politics are closely intertwined, said Sutyagin, and Yanukovych’s political support base is in the energy-hungry industrial east of the country, which tends to look more to Russia and where its fertilizer and aluminum businesses are centered.

Soon after taking office, Yanukovych signed a treaty with Moscow that extended its right to use Ukraine’s Black Sea ports for an additional 25 years, until 2042, in return for a renegotiated deal on natural gas imports that knocked $100 per thousand cubic meters off the price.

The ports, on the Crimean Peninsula, are strategically useful to Russia’s navy but more importantly hold symbolic significance for the Kremlin, which sets great store in military power, said Sutyagin.

The Orange Revolution was an unvarnished disappointment because they fell to squabbling and settling old scores almost as soon as they got into power.
Nicholas Redman, senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies

"It’s still very difficult for the Russian ruling elite to recognize that Ukraine is finally independent," Sutyagin added, and Moscow still tries to take a "big brother" role toward its neighbor.

Russia is also pressing Ukraine to join a "customs union," involving Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan, rather than pursue closer links with Europe.

But in the longer term, Ukraine is playing a hand of diminishing strength in international terms, said Redman.

Although Kiev is seeking to exploit recently discovered shale gas reserves in a bid to lessen its dependence on Russia, Moscow is investing in alternative transit routes for its oil and gas to reach Europe.

That would mean Ukraine no longer has the bargaining chip of its gas pipeline to use in negotiations with its powerful neighbor.

Meanwhile, the controversy over Tymoshenko’s alleged abuse in prison, with images of her bruised body seen around the world, has given opponents of greater Ukrainian integration within Europe plenty of ammunition, said Redman.

"Yanukovych’s desire to consolidate his grip on power and to ensure that power does not transfer back to anyone else — that Tymoshenko doesn’t get a second bite of the cherry — has in effect closed off the Western option, but he refuses to see it," Redman said.

In domestic terms, Yanukovych’s rolling back of democracy since gaining power and the incarceration of Tymoshenko has boosted popular support for her and her party, Kuzio said.

This could lead to pain at the polls for Yanukovych in October — if free elections are held — and make a humiliating boycott of the Euro 2012 tournament in Ukraine just the start of the president’s woes.

When Self-Love Is Fueled By Petro-Dollars

I built a monument to myself …

GÜNDOGAR


Bayram Makhmutov

In Ashgabat, the Turkmen president put up a statue of Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov. The sculpture is installed in the Museum of Fine Arts.

Pushkin’s famous line, made in the title, everyone knows, of course. Indeed, the trail is not overgrown, leading to miraculously monument of the poet: priceless works of A. Pushkin’s love back in the XIX century, and now love.

Now on the 21st century, the fashion erect monuments to himself – and not just miraculous. A striking example of this – Turkmenbashi Saparmurat Niyazov , who built a life for a gilded monument to himself. A follower of Turkmenbashi the Great – the great Arkadag, although at the beginning of the presidency did not seem to approve of such actions, but later learned to enjoy the exaltation of his person, while respecting a certain caution. He has not destroyed all the monuments of Turkmenbashi, but began to add to them your own.

In the newspapers there were reports that a statue put up in Ashgabat President of Turkmenistan Gurbanguly Berdymukhamedov . The sculpture is installed in the Museum of Fine Arts, where most recently an exhibition of flowers. The president is depicted on horseback, in the national headdress. Near his hands sculptor dove.

After the "democratic" elections, where he won 97 percent of the vote, re-elected president, perhaps, thought it may be (or rather, sit in the saddle) at the museum with the proud winner of view. During his reign, Berdymukhammedov, Niyazov as, above all, take care of themselves, showering himself all sorts of awards and honors. Called "Arkadagom" provided his numerous relatives comfortable life, and most importantly – has surrounded himself with people such as Deputy Prime Minister Byagul Nurmuradova , which only thinks how to please their president. How else to understand that even the International Women’s Day was devoted to Arkadagu? "Good wish Arkadagu mother country," "Happy woman happy era" – that’s the name of celebrations held in Turkmenistan during the celebration of International Women’s Day. March 7 at the "Palace of Happiness" was a concert titled "Glory Arkadagu – Hero, who gave people happiness", the same events were held in educational institutions.

Not far behind, and theaters of Turkmenistan: the audience was invited to a presentation dedicated to Arkadagu. In particular, the composition, "You – the Turkmens Arkadag!" Went on the stage of the Turkmen National Youth Theatre. Alp Arslan, the "era of lasting happiness" – in the State Russian Drama Theatre. Pushkin, "you Arkadag, from a happy youth wishes!" – The Turkmen students Theater. Mollanepes.

Gurbanguly Berdymukhammedov, the cult of personality today compared to a cult of personality of Joseph Stalin . Perhaps, the great dictator of the 20th century would have turned green with envy if he saw how proudly raised his head, pointing the way to a happy future immortalized by the great sculptor Arkadag! And the main thing that unites these two "great" figures: Arkadag also keeps everything and everyone with his iron hand so tightly that in Turkmenistan, as they say, even a dog without his permission is not barking.Indeed, for Turkmens came the era of Power. The era of power … Arkadaga.

Especially for "Gundogar"

Iron Curtain Returning To Turkmenistan

Doors are closing!

Gundogar 

Nurmuradov Niyazmuradov

The Turkmen practice of “tightening the screws”

The situation with respect to human rights and freedoms in Turkmenistan is becoming critical. Aggravates the situation has recently entered into force the Law “On Migration”, which is the next step for the authorities ‘crackdown’.

This document sets out restrictions on entry of foreign nationals and citizens of the republic to travel abroad. Entered into force on the legal act replaces a similar document, which operated from 2005.

The law, signed by 31 March this year by President K. Berdymukhammedov, there are some significant differences. To all other grounds for refusal of a foreign citizen or stateless person a visa referred to in article 11, paragraph 4 is added – “… when his residence in the territory of Turkmenistan against the interests of national security, may disrupt public order or cause moral damage to the population of the country.”

A similar point is added in Article 30 of Chapter V, on the exit of citizens of Turkmenistan – “… if his departure is contrary to the interests of National Security.”

This means that the Turkmen authorities may prohibit any person at the entry and exit without any intelligible reason, not bothering to any explanations.

At the same time in Turkmenistan since 2000 has been “blacklisted” Travel ban citizens. Persons included in this list are prohibited from leaving the country without the law “On Migration”.

Currently, the “black list”, according to the Turkmen human rights organizations, appear 18 000 Turkmen citizens, including journalists, few civil society activists, dissidents, relatives of political prisoners and opposition leaders, political dissidents, social activists and Turkmen students studying in foreign universities. According to activists, human rights groups, these categories of people will automatically fall under the definition of “threatening national security of Turkmenistan.”

Among some observers, there is a perception that the new law is a kind of a response to the devastating conclusion of the UN Committee on Human Rights, after hearing the official report on the situation in Turkmenistan. Realizing that the opposition and NGO activists, asked the “wrong questions” and abroad, do not get it, the authorities punished their relatives and friends of people who failed in his time to leave the country. Berdymukhammedov understands that in the case of travel abroad, these citizens will join the ranks of critics of the Turkmen regime.

There was already a whole layer of dissidents, not willing to quietly observe the theater of the absurd with Arkadagom in the title role. These people tend to move from Turkmenistan, mainly in the CIS and Turkey. In March alone, the Migration Board Lebap province received 315 applications requesting the issuance of passports. But pretext of a large-scale preparations for the upcoming census in Turkmenistan, members of the State Migration Service, refer to the familiar “black lists” and the passport of the applicants did not make out.

Paragraphs implementation of railway and air tickets wishing to go abroad are forced to sell tickets “at both ends” with a warning that in case of no return in a period marked by a ticket, their relatives in Turkmenistan will be punished. Among the population there are rumors that if your family did not return from abroad, you become an accomplice of “betrayal.”

Meanwhile, the population of Turkmenistan, especially those who wish to move to Russia, is growing dissatisfaction with the artificially created difficulties in the preparation of documents for the sale of real estate. In all notaries of the country received “instructions from above” – under any pretext not to take the documents from the citizens who intend to sell their homes due to the departure of the Russian Federation.

Authorities’ actions are contrary not only to international norms, but also its own legislation of Turkmenistan. Thus, the words Deputy Foreign Minister Vepa Khajiev, shamefully declared in the UN Committee on Human Rights that “in the East along with the laws and practices are” fully find their confirmation …

Especially for “Gundogar”