Saturday, May 26, 2012


Transmission

Ukraine's Smear Campaign

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As the two candidates in Ukraine's presidential runoff escalate an acrimonious war of words, the campaign is showing an even uglier side on the streets. In this western Ukrainian stronghold of support for the Orange Revolution five years ago, circulating leaflets carry a photo of its heroine, Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, under the words "Don't Vote for That Jew!" The leaflet includes an alleged facsimile of Tymoshenko's handwriting that purports to reveal her background as Jewish and Russian and asks how Tymoshenko can call herself Ukrainian.

Another leaflet purports to be a copy of a letter from Tymoshenko's erstwhile Orange Revolution ally, President Viktor Yushchenko, in which he calls on Ukrainians to vote for Tymoshenko's rival, pro-Moscow Viktor Yanukovych.

Although it's not clear who's behind the smears, the leaflets are helping fuel an atmosphere of bitter cynicism ahead of the election. Although many voters here say they'll cast their ballots for Tymoshenko only as the lesser of two evils, some say they'll abstain from voting altogether. Residents say they're disillusioned by the Orange camp's broken promises to clean up rampant corruption and reform the economy. Piles of unplowed snow snarling traffic along the streets of this faded baroque and predominantly Catholic city are blamed on corrupt politicians' absconding with municipal funds.

But the authorities in Lviv have beefed up a contingent of security service officers guarding a statue of Ukrainian nationalist hero Stepan Bandera, reviled as a Nazi collaborator by many in predominantly Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine. Rumors that members of Yanukovych's Party of Regions plan to blow up the statue are competing with others that it's Tymoshenko supporters who want to destroy it to blame the crime on their opponents.

During a campaign stop in his native town of Yenakiyevo in eastern Ukraine on January 2, Yanukovych pledged he would fire Tymoshenko and her government in short order if elected.

Each side is accusing the other of preparing to falsify the elections, raising fears neither will accept February 7's results.

-- Gregory Feifer, reporting from Lviv


UPDATE -- RFE/RL’s Ukrainian Service reports that in the eastern Ukrainian city of Luhansk, a Yanukovych stronghold, leaflets are circulating with calls for an election boycott.

The leaflets claim to be from the Communist Party and Natalia Vitrenko, the leader of the pro-Russian Progressive Socialist Party. But Vitrenko claims that the Tymoshenko camp is behind the fliers, which she called a “provocation.” She told RFE/RL that her own vote it going to Yanukovych.

The Tymoshenko campaign has rejected the accusations, and Tymoshenko Bloc parliament deputy Andriy Shevchenko said that both the Communist Party and Vitrenko's party have been closely aligned with Yanukovych's Regions Party for several years.
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by: cherkasy5 from: Lviv
February 03, 2010 13:50
Perhaps it is fitting that after the Tymoshenko-organized Jew-baiting smears (propagated by such unsavory characters as Ratushniak and Kuzio) against her rival Arseniy Yatseniuk earlier in the campaign, the same tactics are being used against her.

As far as the Donbass and Vitrenko, Tymoshenko is logically trying to take advantage of hard-core pro-Russian voters who find Yanukovich too moderate and pro-Ukrainian in his views. I think that the number of such voters in the Donbass is small, though perhaps it is higher in Crimea.

by: cherkasy5 from: Lviv
February 03, 2010 14:05

Is it Feifer or the RFE/RL editors who keep slipping in that sneaky smear, "the pro-Moscow Viktor Yanukovich" with every first reference to Yanukovich in every article? If you've got some solid proof that he's pro-Moscow, you ought to delve into that a bit more deeply, no?

Yanukovich is not pro-Moscow. He is pro-Eastern Ukraine. The Western world of journalism needs to learn once and for all that Eastern Ukraine, though it may be Russian-speaking, is not part of Russia and is not governed by Moscow. Yanukovich is backed by Eastern Ukrainian, not Russian, business interests.

Tymoshenko's richest oligarchic backer, Sergey Taruta, recently sold a large chunk of his multibillion-dollar industrial empire to Russia's state-controlled VneshEconomBank (chairman of the board Vladimir Putin). From a business-oligarchic standpoint, if anybody is pro-Russian in this election, it is Yulia Tymoshenko...

by: Flabbergasted from: US
February 03, 2010 18:29
Geez Cherkasy. Yushenko is gone but not forgotten,eh? It seems to me that you are Yushenko's Kuzio. You'll even endorse Satan himself as long as it is not Blondie. Ever heard of Pyrrhic victories?

The reason western media will call Yanukovich a Kremlin stooge is simple, pictures of him on a liplock with Putin during 2004 elections. What else do you need? Ah, yes Russian as the official language of Ukraine. Hmm, need more? How about giving the GTS to Russian oligarchs? Take your pick. I've been to Eastern Ukraine and I know there are plenty of these "Eastern Ukrainians" who call themselves Russians.

Here's a hint. The easiest and fastest way for Ukraine to get rid of Blondie is by voting her as President in this election. Five more years of torture and then a new awakening. How about that?

by: David from: Spain
February 04, 2010 07:36
Flabbergasted- Personally I can't stand Yanukovich, but you must be the only one to ignore that Kuzio is Tymoshenko's main 'intellectual' backer abroad. With a good (financial/political) reason, I guess.

by: David from: Spain
February 04, 2010 13:26
Flabbergasted- it's obvious I didn't understand your comment at first sight. Sorry for the precipitated answer.

by: Flabbergasted from: US
February 04, 2010 18:30
David from Spain. I'm fully aware that Kuzio is on Tym's payroll as a spin doctor. That was not the point. Maybe I should be more clear. I think Tym is as close as a dictator can be. Yanuk on the other hand cannot spell dictator. Which one is more dangerous? I believe Tym is. However, if she wins this elections, the country still has the legal recourse to dispose of her after five years and that would be the end of her. If Yanuk wins, there is a chance that Tym will steamroll over the "Perfesser" and make changes to the constitution and THEN, in the next five years she will run and may win the Presidency. Then UA will have a President-for-life. Scary, isnt it?

My question to you is: What is your choice, cut off an arm or a leg?

by: Yuri-Kharkiv from: Odessa
February 04, 2010 19:21
Why give her the benefit of five years to screw-up what took her around three years to do? Or haven't you had enough of her yet? Very assinine option, Flab.

by: UkrToday
February 05, 2010 03:50
The presidential election is a farce nothing but a circus of clowns. Another example as to why Ukraine would have been better off if the head of state was elected by a constitutional majority of two thirds of Ukraine's parliament as is the case in Estonia, Latvia, Moldova, Hungary, Greece, Switzerland, and the Czech Republic. At a cost of over one billion dollars what does Ukraine get for it - Sweet F All.

The presidential system has and will continue to fail Ukraine. The sooner Ukraine can implement constitutional reform and remove power from the office of the presidential the better off Ukraine will be. Ukraine needs to follow in Estonia and Latvia's footsteps and adopt a full parliamentary democracy in line with European standards and European values.

by: Flabbergasted from: US
February 05, 2010 16:11
UkrToday, how's the weather in Oz today? Having problems with speedbumps lately?

by: Michael Stevens from: Avdeevka, Donbass Region
February 06, 2010 23:14
Its a shame Mr Yanukovych, a pro-east-Ukraine man and PM at the time, could not have rigged the auction of Luganskteplovoz Locomotive so that at least one east-Ukrainian Oligarch could have been the beneficiary of the bargain price it brought.

Months earlier, before Yanukovych blocked the original auction date for un-specified reasons, there were at least half a dozen bidders (several from western Europe, at least two within Ukraine) expected to pay billions for the majority stake in the company.

Then on March 23rd 2007 the re-scheduled auction took place with little if any announcement of the suspension having been lifted. Oddly, the only bidders were Russian firms and at a fraction of the expected price.

Thankfully, President Yuschenko smelled something rotten and cancelled the sale and ordered a full investigation.

I don't think the voters have a good choice in this run-off election.

About This Blog

Written by RFE/RL editors and correspondents, Transmission serves up news, comment, and the odd silly dictator story. While our primary concern is with foreign policy, Transmission is also a place for the ideas -- some serious, some irreverent -- that bubble up from our bureaus. The name recognizes RFE/RL's role as a surrogate broadcaster to places without free media. You can write us at transmission+rferl.org

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