Ukraine’s future
Linguistically challenged
How Ukraine falls between political, economic and linguistic camps
FOR anyone writing about Ukraine, language is always a problem. Not the Ukrainian that is favoured in the west of the country, nor the Russian that is still spoken in the east, but the language used to describe the country’s politics. The usual terms simply do not apply.
With Viktor Yanukovych, a thuggish president, in charge and his arch-rival, Yulia Tymoshenko, in jail, Ukraine is clearly not a democracy. But it is not a dictatorship either. Political power is a means of enrichment rather than governance. Street protests are scarce not because of fear of repression but because Ukraine is increasingly atomised. Opposition politicians are an extension of the business groups they claim to fight. Rules are flexible, allegiances fluid and the idea of an elite—a class of people responsible for the country—is almost meaningless. Oligarchs treat Ukraine as a cash cow. Graft is so rife that it is hard to see how any money at all is left in the budget. In the words of one foreign observer, Ukraine “resembles a car in a fog with no light and no map.” Surprisingly, it is still running.
But it is not following any particular route. With Russia pressing Ukraine to join the Eurasian Union and the European Union still trying to lure Ukraine into an association and free-trade agreement, Mr Yanukovych’s choice seems to be to do neither—justifying Ukraine’s name, meaning “borderland”. At a recent summit, the EU told Mr Yanukovych to take genuine steps towards political reform and to stop persecuting his political opponents if he wanted a deal. Yet within days, Ms Tymoshenko’s principal lawyer, Sergei Vlasenko, had been kicked out of parliament and charged with car theft and robbery. A few weeks earlier, asked at a press conference about the risk of being arrested, Mr Vlasenko showed a middle finger to Mr Yanukovych. Mr Yanukovych seems to have responded in kind, to the disbelief of many Western ambassadors.
Yet Mr Yanukovych is hardly more accommodating towards Russia. After Vladimir Putin, Russia’s president, angrily lectured him about the benefits of the Eurasian Union, including cheaper gas, Ukraine started to buy gas from Hungary to reduce its dependence on Gazprom, Russia’s state-controlled gas giant. Gazprom accused Ukraine of scheming.
Yulia Mostovaya, editor of Zerkalo Nedeli, an independent weekly, says that Mr Yanukovych’s idea of Ukraine’s sovereignty is based not on a sense of nationhood but on a firm belief that “Ukraine can only be pillaged by the Ukrainians”. Over the years Ukrainian officials have done a fine job. The most blatant example is in public procurement. In 2010, under pressure from Western governments, Ukraine adopted a new procurement law to close many loopholes. “We saw this as our major feat”, says a Western diplomat. “Since then, this law has undergone some 28 amendments,” he adds, sighing. The number of procurement contracts awarded without open tenders has gone up.
According to the Ukrainian edition of Forbes, companies linked to ten beneficiaries win 60% of all contracts. The leader of the Forbes list is Alexander Yanukovych, the president’s elder son. (He disputes the truthfulness and methodology of the Forbes’ ratings.) Most observers say that “the family”, a network linked to Mr Yanukovych’s family, has been expanding its influence, irking some of the older established oligarchs.
The power of the “family” is rivalled by at least two other groups. The first is led by Rinat Akhmetov, Ukraine’s richest tycoon and one of the world’s biggest steel producers. The second comprises Dmitry Firtash, a gas trader, and Sergei Levochkin, his junior partner, who is also Mr Yanukovych’s chief of staff. Mr Levochkin recently emerged as a 20% owner of the country’s largest private television channel, Inter, after a third partner, Valery Khoroshkovsky, a former security-service head, sold his stake and left Ukraine. He seems to have overreached. Rivalry is rife not just between clans but within them as well, and loyalties are flexible. To hedge their bets, each Ukrainian oligarch supports a spectrum of politicians, providing a degree of pluralism in the system.
Politically Mr Yanukovych is not as strong as he seems. In last October’s parliamentary elections, his Party of Regions got only 30%, despite using every dirty trick in the book. “The election was not fair, but the result was a loss for Yanukovych,” one Western observer says. His rivals, including Ms Tymoshenko’s block, reinforced by Arseny Yatseniuk, a former speaker of parliament, Udar (Punch), a party led by Vitaly Klichko, a heavyweight world boxing champion, and Svoboda, a party of right-wing nationalists, jointly got over 50% of the vote. Had it not been for Mr Yanukovych’s tinkering with the electoral code, he could have been out of power.
His defeat was most striking in Kyjiv where the ruling party got under 13% of the vote. The prospect of winning mayoral elections and thus creating a political platform for beating Mr Yanukovych in the 2015 elections energised Mr Yanukovych’s rivals. On April 2nd some 4,000 marched to the Rada to demand a mayoral election in Kiev in June. This was a far cry from the Orange protesters who swept across Kyjiv, in 2004 to deprive Mr Yanukovych of his rigged victory in the presidential election over Viktor Yushchenko. The disappointment in the result of the Orange revolution makes its repeat less likely. But Ukrainians are coming to realise that their future depends not on the colour schemes of its politicians but on rules and institutions that can be described in normal language.
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