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Point of View

Does it honour you?

ImageBy Victoria Sumar

Today Vecherniy Kharkiv daily and Status quo online edition came out with a report that police officers had suffered bodily injuries as a result of a search operation at the apartment of Vyacheslav Ismaylov.

Actually, the both editions referred to a press release issued by the ministry of the Interior saying “when the above-cited citizen was informed through the house intercom we had to proceed with a search, he began uttering some obscenities and said he would use a firearm, if police officers approached his apartment”.

“Thus, we took a decision to call “Berkut” special force unit officers with the intent to force the entry door. The operation was conducted in presence of search witnesses and a representative of the local government body.

“As the apartment was searched, the journalist’s behaviour, as well as this one of his sons and wife was cynical, they used bad language, threatened the police officers  with a physical violence and dismissals from the ministry of the Interior.The police officers recorded all that on video”.

Frankly, it is hard to imagine how some unarmed persons could threaten the armed cap-a-pie “Berkut”-men with a physical violence.

Our journalist who is investigating the Klymentyev’s case now, was present at the scene. He said several times they called an ambulance for Ismaylov's wife, in order to prevent syncope. Not only she was unable to threaten anybody, she could not speak, as she was shocked by such a number of masked men armed with Kalashnikovs assault rifles.

There were five “Berkut”-men for each person in the apartment, and these brave soldiers, as it was found out, suffered physical violence…

Ismaylov was crying they tried to plant some white powder to his apartment, the journalists heard it. And today the police reported they did find drugs in the apartment…

So, I would like to ask these men with shoulder straps, who had signed this press release, and maybe this is a naïve question: have you ever heard what honour is?

All this smells a bad movie. But, unfortunately, this is Ukraine's reality.  This is a semi-criminal state where human rights is nonentity, where nor law, neither legitimacy exist. This is a country where its citizens are totally unarmed in front of the arbitrary rule of those who are supposed to protect them. This is Ukraine in 2010.  

Is this Ukraine for people?

 

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President signs law altering Ukraine voting rules-AP
Thursday, 04 February 2010
Ukraine's president has signed a law that his former Orange Revolution ally warned would open the door to falsification of Sunday's presidential election.

President Viktor Yushchenko signed a bill Thursday that eliminates a requirement that representatives of both candidates supervise vote-counting at polling stations.

Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko appealed to Yushchenko earlier Thursday not to sign the bill, adopted by parliament a day earlier. She said the revised law would mark "the end of fair elections in Ukraine" and allow her opponent Viktor Yanukovych to rig the vote.

Yanukovych called Tymoshenko's allegations a sign of weakness and accused her of using "dirt, lies and slander."

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

KIEV, Ukraine (AP) — Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko vowed Thursday to send her followers to the streets if her opponent steals this weekend's presidential vote in Ukraine, raising the threat of indefinite political turbulence in this former Soviet nation.

"We will rally the people" a grim Tymoshenko told reporters, pledging to use "all means" to ensure a fair election, including mass protests.

Accusing opponent Viktor Yanukovych of preparing to steal Sunday's election, she said: "Don't let him rape democracy."

Five years ago, hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians clogged the streets of Kiev for weeks to protest a rigged election and demand economic and political reform, in what came to be called the Orange Revolution. Yanukovych had been counted as winning that vote, but the Supreme Court ordered a rerun, which was won by Viktor Yushchenko.

Yushchenko's term was marked by squabbling with Tymoshenko and long power battles with the Yanukovych-led opposition. Yushchenko got only about 5 percent of the vote in the Jan. 17 first round of presidential voting.

Analysts say the chances for prolonged mass protests among the disillusioned population are slim.

"A repeat of the 2004 events is impossible," said Vladimir Fesenko, head of Ukraine's Penta Center for Applied Political Research. "The only people that will take part in street protests will be hired hands and a small number of supporters."

Meanwhile, Tymoshenko's political position appears to be rapidly deteriorating as she skirmishes with Yanukovych for control of key institutions that could affect the outcome of the ballot.

On Wednesday, parliament repealed the requirement that representatives of both candidates certify the vote at polling stations, a move that Tymoshenko said laid the groundwork for large-scale fraud.

Yanukovych's Party of Regions insists that the work of election commissions will not be impeded if all members are in attendance. Yanukovych has warned that Tymoshenko may try to disrupt the ballot-counting process by withdrawing her representatives from local election boards if, as he expects, she is defeated.

"With every day that passes, Tymoshenko is letting the initiative slip out of her hands," said Vadim Karasev, director of the Institute of Global Strategies. "Tymoshenko is behaving like a loser."

Fesenko said the Party of Regions has taken control of the institutions that will prove key in giving an official seal of approval of the vote.

"Yanukovych has created the infrastructure for victory, having gained control over the Central Election Commission, key courts and destroyed the Orange majority in parliament," he said.

Tymoshenko said Wednesday that her representatives at four local election boards have already been forced to resign.

"The law was only passed today, and already they have begun to throw our representatives out of district and precinct election commissions," she told the private 1+1 television channel.

Yushchenko has not yet signed the law and she appealed to him not to do so.

"We appeal to President Yushchenko and remind him that this is what we fought against in 2004," Tymoshenko said.

Yushchenko has called on his supporters to vote for "against all," an option on the Ukrainian ballot.

Karasev agreed that Wednesday's law would only tighten Yanukovych's grip on electoral institutions.

"The situation taking shape is the worst possible scenario for Tymoshenko," he said. "The Orange coalition has been destroyed."

___

Associated Press

 
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Criminal liability as a repressive tool, who is to profit by it?
ImageThe Ukraine MPs are going to resume an old practice of criminal liability for libel. May 17, the MP Vasyl Kyselyov, who had been elected as a member of the Party of Regions list, has submitted a respective bill at the parliament (Verkhovna Rada).
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Debate

At the beginning of June several attempts to restrict the journalists’ rights have been reported
Wednesday, 09 June 2010

The first week of June and the last week of May a number of incidents have been reported which are evidence of attempts made by new Administration of the President, the Cabinet of Ministers and some representatives of the governing party in the regions to restrict rights and freedoms of the mass media and Ukraine’s citizens. These are alarming attempts of the head of the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) and, being in his second job, co-owner of the most important TV channel to exert influence on procedure of delivering the authorizations to broadcast for two independent and critical towards authorities TV channels, Channel 5 and TVi. As response to this pressure the journalists have started a campaign “Stop to censorship!”, held the Journalist’s Day. One should remark, the action which involved several prominent journalists from national TV channels has not been even mentioned in the news at these TV channels. These are facts involving pressure by government bodies.

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