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TYMOSHENKO FACES RIVAL CLAIM TO BE ANTI-YUSHCHENKO ORANGE FACTION PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 13 December 2005

By Taras Kuzio

The youth group Pora (It's Time), which played an important role in Ukraine's Orange Revolution in November-December 2004, is set to contest the March 2006 parliamentary elections in an alliance with the Reforms and Order (RiP) party (pora.org.ua).
The once united Orange coalition will now enter the elections divided among five blocs and parties. These include President Viktor Yushchenko's Peoples Union-Our Ukraine (NSNU), the Yulia Tymoshenko bloc, Pora-RiP, the Yuriy Kostenko bloc, and the Socialist Party (SPU). It remains to be seen whether contesting the elections through five political forces will attract additional votes or split Orange voters.
The hard-line opposition forces are primarily united around defeated presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych's Regions of Ukraine, which is leading in opinion polls. The only other hard-line opposition force set to enter parliament will be the Communist Party (KPU), which will likely tie the SPU for seats.
The fragmented Orange coalition is undoubtedly a failure for President Yushchenko, who sought to maintain Orange unity through a strong pro-presidential party. Only two small parties, Solidarity and the Youth Party, opted to merge with NSNU. One wing of Rukh joined the NSNU bloc while another created its own bloc.
Opinion polls consistently show that only six blocs will definitely win seats in the new parliament: NSNU, Tymoshenko, SPU, KPU, Regions, and Speaker of Parliament Volodymyr Lytvyn's bloc. Two potential outsiders that could make it over the low 3% threshold are the newly created Pora-RiP bloc and the Natalia Vitrenko bloc (composed of the extreme left Progressive Socialist Party and the Soiuz party).
Pora-RiP will target two groups of voters. First, Pora-RiP will compete with the Tymoshenko bloc for disgruntled Orange voters. Second, the bloc may attract young people who were especially active and came of age during the 2004 elections and the Orange Revolution. Nevertheless, a word of caution is in order.
In the 1998 elections the Green Party successfully targeted young people and entered parliament with 5.43%, even though it was financed by oligarchs who are now backing the Tymoshenko bloc. In the 2002 elections the Winter Crop Generation party, modeled on Russia's Union of Right Forces, failed to enter parliament after obtaining only 2.02%. Pora-RiP could obtain support in the same constituency as the Greens in 1998 or the Lytvyn bloc next year, about 5-7%.
RiP is a long-established party that grew out of Rukh in the 1990s. The Pora-RiP bloc has a number of well-known and respected individuals in its top ten, who should ensure its popularity. RiP's leader is Finance Minister Viktor Pynzenyk. Volodymyr Filenko and Taras Stetskiv, also on the list, were the intermediaries between Yushchenko's election headquarters and the organizers of the street protests and tent city on the Maidan. Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko, another NSNU-Maidan intermediary, was tempted to join the Pora-RiP bloc but has opted to remain on the SPU ticket.
Serhiy Taran, head of the Reporters without Frontiers Kyiv office, and Pora leaders Vladyslav Kaskiv and Yevhen Zolotariov are also well known. These Pora leaders belong to the wing of Pora commonly referred to as "yellow Pora" because of the color of their symbols.
The other wing, "black Pora," condemned the yellow wing's creation of a Pora political party, noting that after Serbia's Otpor (Resistance) group established a party, failed to enter parliament.
The head of the Pora-Rip list is Vitaliy Klichko, a world-class boxer. Klichko explained that he wants to help young people to enter parliament -- individuals "who never figured in corruption scandals" (Ukrayinska pravda, December 13). This was a clear reference to the September accusations that rocked Yushchenko's entourage. "It is pleasant to stand together with people who have clean hands," Klichko commented.
In the 2004 Ukrainian elections, as in earlier democratic revolutions in Serbia and Georgia, youth sought to pressure their elders to unite the opposition in order to successfully oppose the regime. The Pora-RiP bloc also wants to reunite the Orange coalition into a new, pro-Yushchenko parliamentary majority in the new parliament.
This strategy arises out of two fears.
First, as Filenko warned, "Our aim is also to slap on the wrists those who are thinking about joining with Yanukovych," (Ukrayinska pravda, December 12). This threat refers to the September memorandum signed by Yushchenko with Yanukovych as well as opposition within the Yushchenko camp to Tymoshenko's return as prime minister.
Second, the democrats fear the threat posed by the "revenge" of former president Leonid Kuchma's regime through a victory by Regions of Ukraine. The threat of "revenge" was outlined in alarmist tones by Ihor Zhdanov, first deputy head of the central executive committee of NSNU (Ukrayinska pravda, December 8).
Zhdanov called for unity within the Orange camp to fend off Regions of Ukraine. What he ignores is that the threat exists because Yushchenko has failed to honor his oft-repeated 2004 campaign pledge that "bandits would sit in prison."
A new Pora leaflet pointedly asks, "Why are they not sitting [in prison]?" alongside portraits of Yanukovych and other senior Kuchma officials. The Tymoshenko bloc will therefore not be the only force to draw support from the radical wing of the Orange camp.
All of the senior Kuchma-era officials who participated in abuse of office and election fraud appear on the Regions of Ukraine 2006 list, as none of them have been charged. They could obtain immunity after Regions of Ukraine enters next year's parliament.
As Zhdanov pointed out, the 2006 elections should, in reality, be seen as the fourth round of the 2004 elections. The Orange Revolution will succeed or fail depending on the outcome. Yet again, Pora will play a central role.

 
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CHARTER

CHARTER OF MAIDAN VALUES

The peaceful, democratic and at the same time extremely stylish and beautiful Orange revolution did not end up during the days of Presidential elections. Free and thoughtful choice was important, first, but far not the last step in the program of democratic changes enabled by the sufferings by millions of Ukrainians.

Orange revolution was not a choice of personalities, whom the power was delegated. It was a choice of values on which the New Ukraine was to be built.  Millions went out to the streets to stand up not for their mercantile interests, but for the high ideals of Freedom, Democracy, Morality, Justice, and Citizens’ Dignity. The historic choice of Ukrainian nation proves that the rebirth of Ukraine can be achieved first of all by adhering to the values that were expressed in the slogans of Maidan:

Freedom ‘FREEDOM CANNOT BE STOPPED!’

Aspiration of citizens to self-realization and self-assertion, to reaching basic human rights may not be limited by any brutal force. The citizens are allowed everything that is not forbidden by the law.

The use of force, manipulations, intimidation, violations of law and disrespect of moral norms will not save any government from failure. Because such a power will never be supported by its people.

Democracy “TOGETHER WE ARE MANY! WE CANNOT BE OVERCOME!”

The people’s will is a source of legitimacy and efficiency of the government’s actions. In case of brutal disrespect of peoples’ will, people have a right to protest. The joint collective action by self-organized citizens, based on the peaceful and non-violent struggle for their rights, cannot be won by the cliques of the usurpers of power. Unification of the efforts of citizens and organizations into the joint political civic platform of cooperation is the guarantee of effective democratic control of those in power and prevention from the possible reemergence of an authoritarian regime.

Unity ‘EAST AND WEST – TOGETHER!’

Ukraine is a united country, although its citizens are distinguished through cultural, linguistic, religious, regional and ethnical diversity. The residents of Ukraine are UKRAINIANS, CITIZENS OF ONE STATE notwithstanding their political views, cultural orientations and regional identities. All those who incite to regional (religious, linguistic, ethnic, etc.) split should be condemned by the citizens and prosecuted by law.

Rule of Law ‘CRIMINALS – TO JAIL, PROTECTION TO HONEST!’

All political criminals, including the organizers of election fraud, must incur the deserved and irrevocable punishment. The society and government must go through the period of clearance from the previous experience of abandoning the law. Only the genuine clarification will end with a real affirmation of the rule of law as a really functioning and the only possible principle of justice, instead of its manipulation to satisfy the private interests of a few.

The facts of stealing of state property and finances have to find the reflection in the court sentences. Criminals may not remain in the power, and the system of governance shouldn’t create new criminals. The government is supposed to act only within its functions and in compliance with the Law.

Europeanism ‘EUROPEAN UKRAINE’

Ukraine belongs to the European continent not only in the geographical sense. It is truly European civilization, and even more, it carries a seed of the future Europe, a valuable impulse for the renewing of democracy.

Nowadays Ukraine has to assert its European identity, become an integral participant of social, political, and economical processes in Europe. Institutionally this is measured by attaining the membership and active participation in the leading integrative communities at the European and Euro-Atlantic area. This is a way to satisfy the national interests of Ukraine in the strategic perspective.   

Action ‘WE ARE GOING!’

The control over adherence to the Maidan values is overtaken by the new generation of Ukrainians, whose outlook has been formed in the era of Independence. The generation, which gives all its hopes to self-realization with irrevocability of democratic changes in Ukraine.

The Maidan values can only be really settled through the active citizens’ participation in the political and civic life.

IT IS TIME TO LIVE AND WORK FOR THE COMMON GOAL!

Adopted by the delegates of the Congress of Civic Party PORA

22 August, 2005, Square of Independence

 
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