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Showing posts with label Vakhtang Kipiani. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vakhtang Kipiani. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Enemies Within Ukraine


“With friends like that, who needs enemies?” A common adage that many have heard more than once when someone earlier considered a friend betrayed a person. The theme of treason has to be brought to the fore in contemporary Ukrainian society that has far too many enemies within. When the USSR began to crumble in the late 1980s and finally collapsed in 1991, there was a great deal of work Ukraine needed to do in order to ensure the transition from a command to market economy. That took much longer than it should have for many reasons, though there was even a more damning factor which retarded Ukraine’s development in my opinion. With Ukraine’s independence referendum on December 1, 1991 things took time to change, particularly the rewriting of the old laws of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic. 

Some of Ukraine’s first enemies within appeared in 1993 when the sitting Verkhovna Rada voted for Law Number 3623-12. In particular it was Paragraph 2, of Article 2, which reads: “A Deputy can be chosen by a citizen of Ukraine, who has the right to vote, and cannot be less that 25 years of age on the day of elections”. The stipulation to become a deputy under Soviet law was the age of majority, which in Ukraine is 18 years of age. 

I consider those deputies and Leonid Kravchuk, president of the day, as enemies of Ukraine. In passing that law, they shut out the youth of Ukraine who had sacrificed their health and well being during the Revolution on Granite, which marked it’s 30th anniversary this year from October 2nd through 17th. What was Zelensky thinking on July 30th of this year when he appointed octogenarian Leonid Kravchuk, modern Ukraine’s first elected president, to be the head of the delegation of the Minsk Trilateral Contact  Group on the peaceful settlement on the situation in Donbas. 

I believe Zelensky seems to be out of touch with the realities of Ukraine and seems to have little respect for Ukrainians and Ukraine’s history. That lack of respect stems back to 2010, when his comedy program mockingly used the Holodomor in one of their sketches. The lack of empathy for this historic fact has often been ignored and dismissed by Zelensky and his team of his groomers have taught him how to skirt his past and act presidential. Unfortunately, there is nothing presidential about his behaviour and actions, nor is much respect shown for the Ukrainian language by his string of candidates running in local elections on October 25, 2020 from his Servant of the People’s party. Since the day of his inauguration, I’ve wondered, “Which people he and his party members are serving?” 

Ignorance, Indifference and Disrespect

Billboard and election literature of many different the party’s candidates are fraught with Google Translate errors, and Russian-isms. Many of these errors are ones that Ukraine’s elementary school pupils could easily pick out and laugh at.  In preparing their election campaign materials, candidates are required to follow the party’s brand book. This book acts as a guide for many things, from the colors they can or can not use to standard templates for all their published materials. However I wonder where’s the gray matter between the ears of the candidates when it comes to using language. A number of these cock-ups started appearing on social media quite regularly within hours after billboards appeared, and within days of the official start of the campaign on September 5, 2020. 

The one that first caught my eye within the first two weeks of the election campaign was the campaign poster of a Servant of the People’s candidate running in the Obolon district of Kyiv, who took hyperbole to the level of absurdity. Yevheniy Vandin’s poster reads: “We will make Obolon the Capital of Kyiv.” So I wonder if Mr. Vandin even has a clue of the meaning of the word “capital”. The definition of the
word I know is as follows: “n. 1. The capital city of a country or town of a country, state, etc.; seat of government”. As journalist and popular Ukrainian blogger, Maria Madzigon said in a video on the same topic on October 15: “You should have attended your geography classes, Vandin Yevheniy!”

While the foolish mistakes by native Russian speakers is quite understandable, the error of their linguistic ways will clearly reveal to astute voters where their sympathies truly lie. However, when it comes to the former comedian Zelensky the language and form of address he used to the citizens of Ukraine is totally unacceptable. To readers who have studied languages other than English, I’m certain you are aware of the two different forms of the pronoun you. Ukrainian is one those languages that used the two different forms. The common form ty, which would be tu in French as an analogy, and the more formal form vy, or vous in French. Though this really wasn’t Zelensky’s fault – his fault in fact was that he was addressing more than one individual – the citizens of Ukraine and in doing so he should have used vy or in French this would be vous.

The address in question has to do with Zelensky’s way of obfuscating the real problems that Ukrainians should be asking their president right now and this is verbatim what he said, “Hello! Yes, yes, I am directly addressing you [in the singular form], on October 25th at the polls, I will be giving you five important questions. By the way what will be the questions, about this later.” By now citizens of Ukraine have heard these five questions that will be not part of the balloting process as Ukraine’s electoral law does not have a provision for carrying this out during elections. However, as explained by the Presidential Administration, the five questions will be posed to voters outside the polling stations by pollsters from a private polling firm. If so, to quote a post of a good friend mine, Oleksandr Chernenko’s [VRU member 2014-2019, political expert, journalist] Facebook page on October 13, 2020:  “Why is the president involved in this at all?  If the "poll" is a private initiative, then why does Zelensky announce it? If it is an initiative of the president, then which law or which article of the Constitution provides for such powers? After all, he, as an official, must act exclusively within his powers. Everything else is an abuse of power.” 

Health issues at this time are a problem throughout Ukraine, and the questions that Zelensky had no damn business in stepping beyond his prescribed duties as the questions he has posed are nothing but a smoke screen for his administration’s incompetence and corruption. Of the the 65 billion hryvnia earmarked to fight the pandemic, 35 million of this was transferred to the Ministry of Infrastructure of Ukraine, for pet projects such as road construction, while the people of Ukraine suffer. According to the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine’s Corona epidemic monitoring system Ukraine has had 303,648 confirmed cases of the illness; 5,673 deaths; 126,489 recoveries; 171,476 existing and a suspicion of 373,276 illnesses [https://covid19.rnbo.gov.ua/].

Questions to Zelensky

A day after Chernenko’s statements of October 14, Madzigon addressed Zelensky’s use of language as I did above and she also pointed out to Zelensky, that in a democracy it is not the president who should be asking questions of the country’s citizens, but it is they who should be asking him the questions. With that as a prelude she began with addressing some extremely poignant questions, while also addressing Zelensky’s election campaign promises, most of which he has not even come close to accomplishing. Before I continue with some of the questions she posed, let me add this about democracy and democracy building, something I’ve been involved in for more than three decades. Democracy isn’t just about going to polling stations to exercise one’s franchise. Democracy is about holding those the electorate has voted for accountable for their actions or inaction. This is just what Madzigon does and I will for you touch on just a few of her questions and statements below:

    • Why did it cost your administration 12 billion to construct 30 km of highway, while under Poroshenko that same money build 80 km. Thirty and eighty do you recognize the difference?;
    • Why did you spend the money from the anti-Corona virus fund, from the anti-Corona virus fund not for a battle against the pandemic but for roads? It’s brilliant! [she says while clapping];
    • Why under Zelensky, under you, has the clear cutting of forests increased seven-fold?
    • Why was the law on land passed without going through a referendum?;
    • Why did you? You promised us that you would do everything without nepotism, and more than thirty of your friends in some way received positions. How do you explain this?;
    • Why out of all of Ukraine’s previous presidents do you have the largest motorcade of 52 cars. Think about it? Fifty-two. I'm already silent about twenty guards around;
    • Why is Medvedchuk free? Why is Medvedchuk still free?;
    • Why didn’t you declare five million in income? In general, this is a violation of the law, you yourself said that you would resign once you violated the law. 

While we will never know what Zelensky’s response would be to these questions one thing is clear Madzigon’s video in English translation is called: “WHAT WAS THAT??? #fivequestions” and clearly she touched a nerve with at least 14K Facebook users sharing the video and 954 users making comments. 


I’m sure readers can well imagine that how users would have responded in their comments. One comment was as follows: “It makes no sense to ask Zelensky questions, because we saw his inappropriate behavior, false primitive answers and hysterical laughter when he was asked questions by British journalist Stephen Sackur.” This is in reference to Zelensky’s interview on HARDtalk, during his state visit to the UK. Watch and see if you agree with the comment made by one of Madzigon’s followers.

There was one question she asked which touches a nerve in me more than any other. “Why is Medvedchuk still free?” Ukraine watchers who understand the notoriety of Viktor Medvedchuk in the case of dissident Vasyl Stus, who was sent to the Gulag never to return, may have the same sentiments that I have to the “great traitor”! Medvedchuk, in my opinion, was always a crony of the Soviet system, and clearly raised in the spirit of the Komsomol and the Communist Party. I can not remember where I may have either read or heard that as the Soviet Union was collapsing, there were orders from the Kremlin, that Komsomol members must find a way to create a niche in the new reality that was upon them. In short, this meant that they must pillage what they can in order to become wealthy and Medvedchuk did so in Ukraine, just like many of those mentioned in Chrystia Freeland’s book The Sale of the Century did in Russia in the early 1990s. 


Then and Now: Medvedchuk vs Kipiani

While I’ve never met Viktor Medvedchuk, though his behavior in working close to Leonid Kuchma, never invoked any confidence that he was working for the good of Ukraine and its people. Both he and Kuchma ingratiated themselves through their official positions during Kuchma’s two consecutive terms in office. On the other hand, I met Vakhtang Kipiani in the summer of 2003 a number of months after he had become the host and editor-in-chief of a program called  Podviyniy dokaz [Double proof] on the 1+1 television channel. We met at the Writers House at 2 Bankova in Kyiv, with a group of other Ukrainian journalists. At the time I was working in local print media, and as a foreign radio broadcaster for Ukrainian Time, the oldest Ukrainian-Canadian broadcast based out of Montreal. Though what really tied us together the most was our different types of involvement in the Revolution on Granite, in short we are both part of the same brotherhood. Since then I’ve been a friend of Kipiani’s and have followed him in his historical research particularly on the Istorychna Pravda [Historical Truth] website and most recently the YouTube channel of the same name. 

In 2019, after a great deal of research Kipiani published a book on the entire legal procedures against Ukrainian dissident Vasyl Stus [1935-1985], in which Medvedchuk was supposed to be acting in Stus’ defense, though Stus refused his him as a lawyer, which was within his legal rights, though Medvedchuk continued to act as his public defender, against his client’s will. 

Kipiani based his publication on archival material and presented facts.  The complete title translated is as follows: Characteristics of the case of Vasyl Stus. Collection of documents from the archives of the former KGB of the USSR. Then the good old defender of Ukrainians Medvedchuk, got a little pissed and decide to take both Kipiani and his publisher, Vivat, to court in order to ban the books’ publication and distribution. In particular Medvedchuk took offense with one chapter of the book that he considered to degrade his honour and dignity. 

On October 19, 2020 the Darnytsia District Court in Kyiv handed down their decision against Kipiani and his publisher Vivat, and the must cease publication and distribution of this book. The entire legal process has possibly backfired on the “great traitor”.  The court decision had a definite impact on the sale of the book and it may just backfire on “enemy number one of Ukraine”. Kipiani wrote the following two significant comments on his Facebook page. During the afternoon he posted the following: “ I received 157 phone calls today. I didn't have time to react to the majority of them, I'm sorry. Four radio broadcasts plus three television interviews, plus a dozen comments for media. (It's hard to be a superstar, yeah) P.S. In the evening, Facebook also forbade me writing comments and replying in Messenger, because it thinks that I produce spam 😉. Thank you to everyone for their support. Hugs to you all.  I love Ukraine.” About three hours later he posted the following: “More than a thousand people wrote to me in  Messenger about the book. I managed to answer somewhere in the hundreds. After that, the system began to issue an explanation that in order to protect against spam, my ability to respond is suspended. Though they did not say for how long. It may be some type of beacon. But please be patient - I will answer everyone.” 

While much of Medvedchuk’s position in “defending” Stus is in the past and when he was but 26 years old working in Soviet system, dealing with dissidents, few know that his father was considered a Nazi collaborator and maybe his motivation to collaborate with the KGB in order to pay back a debt to the Soviet. That aside. Let’s look at his current behavior and who he is. 

At the current moment Medvedchuk leads a political party that calls itself the Opposition Platform – For Life. The history of this “platform” has been nothing but a manner of disrupting Ukraine’s democratic and economic development. I have no other word than “douche bag” for the members of this party that is in the pocket of the Kremlin. Let’s not forget that Putin is the “godfather” of Medvedchuk’s daughter, and this is the greatest form of nepotism. 

A Possible Key Response

The following is what was reported by RFE/RL regarding the Presidential Administration’s response to the court decision: 

"Most of the content of the book is an exact reprint of the criminal case. That is, the purely documentary basis of the book does not cause the slightest doubt. Thus, it is by this logic of the book that VV Medvedchuk is a participant in a real process that took place in history, and not just a "character of the work." The participant's behavior is analyzed solely on the basis of documented facts, which are not a product of the authors' literary work and literary fiction.”

At the moment it seems like an appropriate response from Zelensky’s administration, that still has many questions to answer. Maybe they are listening on such a politically charged historical issues to the point that they understand that these things matter to many culturally aware Ukrainians, be they in Ukraine or beyond its borders.

I hope readers take the time to read the hyperlinks. As a professional librarian I love to provide value added information to the things I write. Particularly to what is close to my heart and soul. The questions posed by Maria Madzigon are all valid! My one wish now is that all Ukrainians who read English and have learnt something new will share all this information with their colleagues, family and friends. 

 
Vasyl Pawlowsky 
Independent Consultant

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Time for new blood!

Many people who follow the politics of Eastern Europe, and particularly Ukraine, are aware of the recent arrest of the former Premier of Ukraine Yulia Tymyshenko. The “Gas Princess” as she has been referred to by some may have played a game in the court room in order to upgrade her personal popularity. But really, I know the Pechersk District court where she was tried. I offered testimony there, in what seems like a century ago, in a matter of someone fleeing Ukraine during the Kuchma regime. When I arrived there, as a Westerner, I could not understand that this little shit-hole of a place was actually a court of law. Little has changed!

This in itself showed me how important the law of the land was to individuals of nation that at that time was but fifteen years old. The law of the land didn't exist and it to this day doesn't exist.

Is it a ploy? This is not the firs time Tymoshenko has been behind bars!

While many have called for the release of Tymoshenko,I began wondering why? This woman as well as the former President of Ukraine Victor Yushchenko did squat in terms of what they together announced, and what seemed like honest declarations. True, once again the “rule of law” is being abused by those in power.

While Ms Tymoshenko and Mr. Yushchenko may not have gotten along, neither of them delivered on promises. Anyone who followed the speeches on the Maydan in 2004 will know that for certain.

As a good friend and journalist Vakhtang Kipiani recently noted, and while this is a loose translation the points should be considered:

“On a personal level I feel bad for Tymoshenko. And if my voice had any weight I would sign on behalf of her release... She, and before her Yushchenko, became victims of their own (future) in that they were able to live through the worlds of Putin, Lukashenko and Yanukovych but it was necessary to break the model of the oligarchs and carry out harsh and quick liberal reforms – which Shakashvili did. No one felt a bettering of life under “Yulia” or saw the possibility – therefore there is no reason to fight for her. Because she only fought for her own interests.”

Vakhtang makes a very valid point, and not as a Western observer, but as a Ukrainian.

So where does Ukraine stand right now? Those that are considered the opposition, never really gave a shit about the people. And that is clearer than a blue sky on Sunday. Had they, things would be very different in Ukraine right now.

So, what is needed. It won't be anything we are expecting. And it should not involve anyone who can be compromised. Compromise, is the modus operandi of the county, unfortunately. If someone, whoever he or she is, is going to do good for Ukraine, they have to be a “free” and independent individual without any possibility of compromise.

Some analysts have mentioned that Ms. Tymoshenko may have used the courts and her arrest to her political advantage. This may be so, however, I feel that that Ukraine needs something new, fresh and unhindered by the Soviet mentality, and ” nouveau leadership” of a country that will be turning twenty in a few weeks.

While I may not agree with the way the Yanukovych regime is using the court system to eliminate its opponents, we have to think outside of a box. A box that has been created both by democratically minded Ukrainians and their supporters beyond the borders of Ukraine.


Wednesday, July 22, 2009

A New Revolution

Yesterday I was sitting in on a meeting between the Director of Democratic Initiatives Foundation and Vakhtang Kipiani, a leading Ukrainian journalist and probably an individual with the largest personal collection of Ukrainian Samvydav in the world. We were discussing a project that relates to the changes that started to take place during perebudova but also the fact that Russia likes to write its own history and that it is time that Ukrainians be more active in this area.

Just to give this a little bit of a musical twist, back at that time there was a group from L'viv called Opal'niy Prince, one of their songs was called Nova Revolutsiya, which recalls the events the fall of the Berlin Wall, the deposition of Nicolae Ceauşescu. In that song there are lines such as:


Зрушена в Берлині Флойдова Стіна...
Чауческу мертвий Румунія вперед!...


When I get a chance to transcribe the whole song I will make it available.

During that meeting I discovered some very interesting facts that I would like to share with you all.

Twenty years ago there was a conference held in the mountains between Poland and Czechoslovakia it came to be known as the Wroclaw conference and was supported by the National Endowment for Democracy - It is known that V. Havel said that this conference was an encouraging factor for him personally and a stimulus for the Velvet Revolution. In October of this year NED will be sponsoring a conference to be held in L'viv which looks back at those historic times, there is something about that in the above link to NED.

Tommorow, DIF will be holding the first event that relates back to the period when Ukraine was awakening as it had seen what was transpiring in its neighbouring countries. Actually I personally looking forward to this event and to see Bohdan Horyn. I will digress for a moment so that you all will understand why this is something personal to me. On July 1, 1990 I made my first trip to Ukraine (still part of the USSR). Prior to my departure from Montreal Roman Serbyn had given me a letter which he wanted me to personally hand to Bohdan Horyn. In the mid-afternoon of July 1 together with students from Studentske Bratstvo of L'viv and the other five Canadian students who were traveling with me, we were wandering through Mariinsky Park and Demian one of the Ukrainian students said to me, "There's Bohdan Horyn sitting on that bench, you said you had a letter to give him, now is your chance!" So we approached Bohdan Horyn and our new friend Demian introduced us and the first thing I did was to kindly hand Bohdan Horyn the letter from Roman Serbyn. Mission accomplished. Bohdan Horyn asked each of us in turn where we were from, when he finally got to me an I told him that I was from Montreal... he paused for a moment and asked, "Do you know Roman Serbyn from Montreal?" I chuckled and reminded him that the letter I had just handed him was from Roman Serbyn. Like a young child he raised his hands and waved them around and said, "Jakiy tisniy svit!" [What a small world!] Over the next three days in Kyiv... There wasn't a place that we didn't go that we would not run into Bohdan Horyn.

I hopefully video interview him as well as others at the event tomorrow... and get that up on UkeTube ASAP.

Now given I have mentioned that we have to write our own history the request below relates to this, and I would like your assistance if possible. At the current time there is an initiative group working on setting up an internet exhibit which focuses on the role of civic activism in Ukraine and by Ukrainians abroad during the period from the time of President Ronald Reagan's Brandenburg speech on June 12,
1987 [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtYdjbpBk6A] until Ukraine's referendum on independence on December 1, 1991.

The group is made up of Tovarystvo Leva in L'viv with support from NED, Democratic Initiatives Foundation in Kyiv whom I have consulted for over the last ten years, and well known journalist and collector of samvydav, Vakhtang Kipiani and myself to a lesser degree.

Now you ask? What it is I'm looking for you all, and from our community in general. Either you or your friends and others who were actively involved in the Ukrainian-Canadian community may have in your personal collections press clippings, photographs, video from demonstrations, marches, talks by dissidents or other such events that took place during this period, in Canada.

For a start from this side of the big pond, I would just like to let you know that I saw some incredible material related to samvydav here in Kyiv. Hundreds of foil plates which were used to print pro-Ukrainian and anti-Soviet materials which activists from throughout Ukraine would transport to Vilnius, Lithuania where this material was most often printed. These are being scanned and enhanced for the exhibition.

For example, I clearly know that members of SUSK were involved in events on January 22, 1989 at the time that the Live Chain from L'viv to Kharkiv was formed by members of Rukh on that day. In Montreal a candle light vigil was held near the Roddick Gates at McGill with a procession to the Soviet Consulate a few blocks away. Natalia Olynec(originally from New York, studied at McGill now lives in Singapore) was on the front cover of The Montreal Gazette holding a candle at that event and there was a write up. In Ottawa a similar event was held on Parliament Hill and I recall that a good friend Wolodymyr Barabash(originally from Edmonton, father was a photographer, met him in Ottawa) and others made the front page of The Ottawa Citizen. What we are looking for are high quality scans of such materials, these are just the items that come to mind at the current moment. I am sure there plenty of other events which we can collectively think of which we as Canadians can contribute to this exhibition. I also remember a talk that Vyacheslav Briukhovetsky did at McGill sometime in the late 1980s and he probably spoke at a number of different locations in Canada, this was shortly after the formation of Rukh.

We must remember that Ukraine's youth, those under 18 years of age have grown up in an Independent nation, and while they receive Ukrainian history as part of their curriculum, I am certain that they are not aware of the true role that individuals and groups of individuals in Ukraine and abroad played.

I am sure that a number of you have personal collections, and I am certain that those of you who were involved at various levels in your communities must have such materials. The organizers and myself would greatly appreciate your contributions. If you can scan such materials at high-resolution, and with each piece include:

  • The event
  • The Date
  • The location
  • In the case of photographs from personal collections your first and last name.


If you have video and you can digitize it let us know and we will figure out a method in which this can be also made part of the exhibition, possibly later as a multimedia product.

In the very near future I will know exactly where to send such materials for this online exhibit.