Author Archives: RomanInUkraine

Donetsk Greets the Ukraine Crisis With a Shrug – Survey: populace 46% neutral

March 25-28 by the Donetsk-based Institute of Social Research and Political Analysis, found that 46% of respondents believe the locals should take a “neutral, patient position” in case of a Russian invasion. Only one fifth said they would support a Ukrainian effort to resist the Russian forces, according to an advanced copy of the poll results obtained by TIME on Friday. Another fifth said they would welcome the Russian tanks. But perhaps most surprising was the data on how many locals were even paying attention. Nearly a quarter of them did not express “stable or high” interest in what was going on in their city.

“That is part of what makes Donetsk special,” says Alyona Getmanchuk, the director of a think tank called the Institute of World Policy, which is based in Kiev, the capital. The city of Donetsk, whose emblem is a clenched fist holding a hammer, has always been known as a bulwark of the proletariat, particularly coal miners and factory workers whose income these days comes out to a few hundred dollars a month if they’re lucky. “This is a society where both pragmatism and paternalism are very strong,” says Getmanchuk. “They are very disciplined, very hard working, which is the positive side of their Soviet mentality. But on the flipside, they tend to expect a strong leader to decide everything for them, to determine what to do, what to think, where to go and so on.”

Up until this winter, that leader was Viktor Yanukovych, the President of Ukraine and a native of Donetsk whose political party held an effective monopoly on power across the region. For years he lavished Donetsk with pork barrel spending and placed its native sons in senior posts across the country. But when the revolution chased Yanukovych from power in February, he and his allies were completely discredited, particularly after his decision to flee to Russia rather than return to his hometown. The vacuum of authority he left behind became fertile ground for the region’s pro-Russian separatists. But the locals don’t seem to be playing along. Instead of coming out en masse to support an alliance with Russia, they have mainly chosen to tune out, turn inward, and hope that the situation somehow resolves itself without affecting them too much.

On April 16, Getmanchuk, whose think tank broadly supports the new government in Kiev, visited Donetsk to hold a focus group with what she calls “opinion makers” in the city – prominent businessmen, university officials, activists and community leaders. She spent much of the time trying to get a rise out of them. “This was the intellectual elite, and they kept asking why Kiev doesn’t come to save and protect them,” she says. “We explained that no one is coming, that this is your land and you have to formulate your own identity. Who are you? What kind of country do you want? You must find a social consciousness.”

Never in its history has Donetsk really faced those kinds of questions. Since the break up of the Soviet Union, its role as a blue collar buffer between Russia and Ukraine has left it dangling between two worlds, neither invested in the Ukrainian mission to define itself as an independent nation, nor wholly subsumed into Russia’s cultural matrix. According to the survey conducted in late March, the identity of Donetsk residents is deeply fragmented. Only 36% consider themselves citizens of Ukraine. About a fifth say they are “Russian-speaking residents of Ukraine,” while 29% call themselves part of a unique entity – “people of the Donbass,” the gritty mining region that surrounds them.

http://time.com/69083/ukraine-donetsk-separatists-russia-kiev/

If indifference paid, they’d be billionaires.

Survey: 15% of East / South Ukrainians want to unite w Russia. < 33% in Donetsk, Luhansk

Last weekend the Ukrainian newspaper Dzerkalo Tyzhnia published a large survey of more than 3,000 people in eight southern and eastern regions. Some of the results should comfort the country’s leaders: only 15% of respondents want to unite with Russia. Even in Donetsk and Luhansk (the easternmost and most thoroughly Russian-speaking regions), the figure is less than a third. The poll debunks Russia’s narrative of a desperate Russophone community in revolt against a nationalistic government in Kiev: some 77% oppose the armed separatists who have occupied public buildings in the region.

But while many southern and eastern Ukrainians may not support the separatists, neither do they support the government. Half of respondents consider the current, internationally recognised authorities to be illegitimate. In Donetsk and Luhansk, that figure rises to 70%.

http://osp-ua.info/regions/33965-zveri-putina-v-chechne-pridumali-pytki-o-kotorykh-ne-znali-dazhe-stalin-i-gitler-ne-dlja-slabonervny.html

Russia’s Ukrainian minority under pressure

One day last month Roman Romanenko, a Ukrainian living in the Russian city of Vologda, came home to find a swastika painted on his door and flyers stuffed in his neighbours’ mailboxes.

The flyers read: “Living in your building is a piece of Lviv scum”, referring to a western Ukrainian city with a strong sense of national identity, many of whose residents supported the protest movement that led to the ousting of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich.

The flyers warned that Romanenko supported the protest movement, and that his apartment could become a centre for anti-Russian Ukrainian extremists.

Romanenko, who is originally from eastern Ukraine and not Lviv, is the editor of a local newspaper. He recently wrote a popular Facebook post asking Russian President Vladimir Putin to send Russian troops to Vologda, as he had done in Crimea – but this time, to protect local Russians from corruption.

Recently questioned by the local prosecutor’s office, he said the situation has become harder for Ukrainians in Russia over the past few months. “I don’t really talk about Ukraine anymore – not because I don’t have anything to say, but because the topic is just too hot.”

Many Russians were euphoric at their country’s takeover and annexation last month of the Crimean peninsula, which had belonged to neighbouring Ukraine. But Russia’s sizeable Ukrainian minority has remained conspicuously silent. “If you try and talk about Ukraine, they just call you a Banderite [a follower of Ukrainian nationalist Stepan Bandera] or a Maidan protester,” Romanenko told Al Jazeera. . . .

“The media in Russia is lying as if it were North Korea. I never believed it, but 90 percent of people in Russia do,” Botezatu told Al Jazeera. “Some believe it 100 percent, some 70 percent and some 30 percent. But the end result is that even those who believe only 30 percent of it are staunchly against Ukraine and see Nazis everywhere.”

. . . .

Some pundits say Ukrainians will never be treated entirely equally in Russia, because of a long history of being treated as second-class citizens. During the Russian Empire, Ukrainians were often referred to as “little Russians”, and the Ukrainian language was banned from being used in education.

“In Russia, Ukrainians are not considered a separate nation, and the Ukrainian language is considered a dialect of Russian,” said Gasan Gusejnov, a professor at the National Research University’s Higher School of Economics in Moscow, who has written on Ukrainian identity. “That’s why anti-Ukrainian sentiment is outraged that Ukrainians have any sort of national identity of their own.”

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2014/04/russia-ukraine-crisis-minority-under-pressure-2014423104132154242.html

Pro-Kremlin viral video portrays Ukraine invading Russia

FIGHTING NAZIS

Without victory over nazis, celebrated over, and over, and over, and over, Russian identity barely exists. They’re a multi-ethnic, mutli-religious collection of disparate cultures held together at gunpoint, untied only by corruption.

Their latest propaganda video:

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/04/09/pro-kremlin-viral-video-seeks-to-portray-fictious-tale-war-with-ukraine/#

Putin on Women & Children as Human Shields

Poor choice of words on his part. I don’t think he said what he meant, but he did say it. Here’s a translation of the Q&A:

QUESTION: What about the first question? Are you concerned that a war could break out?

VLADIMIR PUTIN: I am not concerned, because we do not plan and we will not fight with the Ukrainian people.

QUESTION: But there are Ukrainian troops, there is the Ukrainian army.

VLADIMIR PUTIN: Listen carefully. I want you to understand me clearly: if we make that decision, it will only be to protect Ukrainian citizens. And let’s see those troops try to shoot their own people, with us behind them — not in the front, but behind. Let them just try to shoot at women and children! I would like to see those who would give that order in Ukraine.”

Russian Stocks, Bonds, Ruble Dive on S&P Rate Cut

I would rather rating agencies not be political tools.

The Russian Moscow’s MICEX stock index fell by 1.5% after S&P cut its rating on Russia one level, to BBB-minus from BBB, citing large capital outflows in the first quarter.

The ratings firm kept its outlook on the country negative, where it has been since March 20, when S&P firm lowered it from stable in light of heightened tension in Ukraine and the prospect of economic sanctions.

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304518704579522933533443854?mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052702304518704579522933533443854.html

Russia fears Crimea water shortage as supply drops

Crimea-Canals

Crimea’s harvest of grapes, rice, maize and soya will be ruined if it does not get more water soon, officials say.

Russia says the Crimea-Ukraine border is now officially a state border.

The Russian government plans to establish permanent checkpoints there, as well as new rules for entering or leaving Crimea, Ria Novosti news agency reports.

The North Crimea Canal delivers water to Crimea from the River Dnieper, in Ukraine’s southern Kherson region. The canal accounts for 80% of Crimea’s water.

The current water shortage is threatening 120,000 hectares (296,000 acres) of Crimea’s crops, which rely on irrigation, Russian Agriculture Minister Nikolai Fedorov said.

A ruined harvest across that area would mean losses of up to 5bn roubles (£83m; $140m), he told the Gazeta.ru news website.

http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-27155885

In Crimea, Ukrainian-speaking 16-yo beaten to death by police after confrontation.

In Crimea, killed 16-year resident of the Rivne region.

As stated in the story channel “Rivne 1”, the mother of the deceased Mark believes that her son scored law enforcement because the young man spoke in Ukrainian.

Man was brutally beaten at Easter, when he returned at night with a friend from a disco. According to his friend who was killed, who were taken to meet them beaten by policemen.

Man, that was in the Crimea on the study, buried in his homeland. Bid him come home, friends and classmates.

http://www.sobytiya.info/news/14/40605

Kidnapped Vice Journalist Simon Ostrovsky Released From Captivity By Pro-Russian Militia

http://www.businessinsider.com/simon-ostrovsky-released-freed-2014-4?utm_source=mobilesrepublic&utm_medium=referral&utm_term=mobilesrepublic

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He was beaten, bound, and then untied and kept in a basement, fed regularly.

***

Simon Ostrovsky, on other detainees: “Their names are Artyom Deyneha, a local computer programmer who was caught setting up a webcam opposite the building where we were being held; Serhiy Lefter, a freelance journalist who was abducted on the main square in Sloviansk in broad daylight; Vadim Sukhonos, a deputy in the Sloviansk city council; and Vitaly Kovalchuk, a former member of the Euromaidan self-defense corps, who by his own admission came to Sloviansk with a group of Right Sector radicals who tried and failed to capture guns from pro-Russia militants.”