Blogging the democratic revolution
Discoshaman has got a Ukraine news roundup for 01/23, and will be covering and posting photos of the inauguration. So will many other bloggers. I’ll make sure to do a roundup of everything by tomorrow night. And for anyone wondering… there is no way I can live up to the promise of not blogging on…
Veronica Khokhlova has the story for us again! Apparently, Kuchma has posted a notice on his official website saying that he has written a letter to the New York Times. Leonid Kuchma, president of Ukraine, has sent a letter to the editor of The New York Times, in which he expressed surprise at the use…
I just wanted to bring to light a comment I left on Bloggledygook that follows up with my full thoughts on the Kuchma interview piece. This is less of a short sex joke, and more of something long and serious. I hope you all don’t mind too much! But here we go… The New York…
C.J. Chivers, the man who wrote the much talked about NYT story about the Orange Revolution and the SBU, has written another piece in which he interviews Kuchma at length. Neeka’s Backlog has commentary and a couple more stories to look at. Yet Mr. Kuchma accomplished critical tasks, including a sustained collaboration with Washington in…
David McDuff has recently posted a long article of exchanges in which “Serbian World Bank economist Branko Milanovic asked the question: “why are the American media, both liberal and conservative, so unanimously anti-Russian?” He posts a list, and I’ll repost the first out of six: 1) For seventy years, commentators have been anti-Soviet and since…
The Kyiv Post is reporting that one of Yushchenko’s main reforms needs to be of the post-KGB security agency, the SBU. (AP) – One of the toughest tasks facing Viktor Yushchenko as Ukraine’s new president likely will be overhauling the State Security Service, the KGB successor agency alleged to have been involved in an array…
Eurasianet has another article called Nipping orange roses in the bud — post-Soviet elites against revolution. This comes as no surprise, because they are understandably running scared. But by making drastic decisions, however, they are creating an unsustainable environment for their own rule. You know how they say, “Keep your friends close, but keep your…
Well, it looks like those protests going on in Donetsk are coming to an end after the Supreme Court declared Yushchenko the winner. Today the superintendent of the camp, Ivan Batytskyj, said: ???????We are moving off. We received an order???????. According to his words, during the day the tents are to be removed. It was…
Ukrainian politician Stepan Gavrish made a bet with another politician for a train car of cognac. The bet was over whether the people would vote in favor of change and reform this election round, and Stepan apparently won. I’m not sure how authentic this website is, because this guy was Yanukovich’s representative to the Central…
I was emailed by abdymok this morning with an article of his that clears up the article written by the New York Times about how the Ukraine secret police stopped the government from attacking the protesters. Stanislav Reutsky doesn????????t write spy novels for a living. But to hear the story of the 15-year veteran journalist????????s…
Siberian Light has a rather impressive news roundup for this week in Russia. I count thirty items, ranging from domestic, business, foriegn relations, the CIS, and a little something extra that includes call girls and Putin all in the same sentence.
I just ran across the most bizarre article asking that very question. And while I have been given the impression that Tymoshenko is a very ambitious woman, perhaps a tad much, this piece lacks so much substance, is written with so much bias, and contains no verifiable quotes that I wouldn’t put it on a…
Here’s a roundup from the Ukrainian blogosphere, some reactions to the very good news! Scott Clark from Foreign Notes talks about the terrible behavior of Yanukovich’s lawyers. Members of the Supreme are purported to have been infuriated at the arguments made by Yanukovych’s attorneys. Apparently, the arguments were more heat and heated than logical or…
David McDuff from A Step At A Time has found a huge synopsium on the situation in Chechnya.
The other day, Condoleeza Rice told the Senate Foreign Relations Commitee about her concerns with Russia… “(The Russian government) is quite constructive in many areas … but that doesn’t excuse what is happening inside Russia, where the concentration of power in the Kremlin to the detriment of other institutions is a real problem,” she told…
Veronica Khkhlova from Neeka’s Backlog has posted an incredibly detailed post describing why the N.Y. Times article about the Orange Revolution and the secret police was probably a big fake. She posts the recent interview with Mykola Melnychenko as well as many historical accounts of the events surrounding his flee to the U.S. What I…
Scott Clark has posted an article dealing with the challenge of the Tatar separatist movement from Ukraine. He also comments and relates some personal experience with the area.
Maidan is reporting that one of Yanukovich’s appeals has been turned over, but what is interesting about this appeal is that it was to prevent the publication of the election results. Therefore, they will be printed tomorrow. MPs are also predicting a January 22nd inauguration date. Bloggledygook has some more about the ruling and Ukraine’s…
The Argus has a a nice, long post about the recent accusations by Russia that Georgia is not doing what it can to prevent terrorists from 1) entering Russia, and 2) stealing their vodka. In any case, I find myself agreeing with him.
Well, Discoshaman is right: not much is talked about Yushchenko’s actual platform in the main stream media. Lucky for us, he did a writeup cover all the main points. Oh, and they have Guiness now. This is definitely an indicator of economic health.
According to Orange Ukraine, the Supreme Court has rejected Yanukovich’s last appeal. I can’t seem to find verification of this through Maidan or Google News, or any other source. Closest thing I found was this but it says that they haven’t made a final, final ruling yet.
Terry Rogers has got the first financial report since the Orange Revolution. Seems to be a lot of confidence in the new leadership. Wish I had a few hundred thousand dollars to blow!
And here is a new catchphrase to add to your political vocabulary. Outpost of Tyranny is quite a mouthful, and seems like the name of a future expansion pack to World of Warcraft, but promising are some of the little looked after countries named. Rice named Cuba, Burma, Zimbabwe, North Korea, Iran, and…. Belarus! This…
Dan McMinn over at Orange Ukraine has a huge roundup of articles regarding the years leading up to the Orange Revolution. They deal with Kuchma’s motives for firing Yushchenko, why Tymoshenko was throwin in jail, and voter preferences in previous years.
Neeka’s Backlog has the calculations done already. And here’s a recent news article. There are some interesting points to note here, however. Opinion polls recently published show that some 60% of this group believe that the state’s task is to provide for its citizens. … Far from welcoming social security reform, the polls suggest that…