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The OTPOR factor in the Ukraine?

by pravda.ru
First it was Georgia, now it is the Ukraine. Pro-western factions ready to sell out to the Washington camp, orchestrated by their foreign masters, sweep to power on the crest of a wave of popular revolt, hooliganism and riots. The Otpor factor. However there is a difference. Eduard Shevardnazde had alienated his people against him, whereas the Ukrainian president, Viktor Yanukovich, has just over half of his electorate on his side.
OTPOR

OTPOR, the Serbian word for "resistance" is the name given to the activists who ousted Slobodan Milosevic from power in Belgrade. The hand of OTPOR in Georgia was visible, Georgian activist and Washington stooge Giga Bokeria liaising with this group in Serbia and receiving them for the return visit to Tblissi which was financed by George Soros" Open Society. Bokeria in turn is financed by the Open Society and by the US-government-backed Eurasia Institute.

There were startling similarities between the events leading to the overthrow of Milosevic and Shevardnadze and now today with the handful of diehards fuelled by a few busloads of hooligans from the Western Ukraine.

Interference

The reaction to the elections in the Ukraine is yet another example of interference in the internal affairs of CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) countries (ex-USSR minus the three Baltic states).The condemnation of the findings of the Central Electoral Committee gives rise to the notion that collective hysteria breaks out in the west every time the stooge they try to place fails to make the grade. In this case, Viktor Yushchenko, the defeated centre-right candidate, is well known to Ukrainian society because he was already Prime Minister for two years between 1999 and 2001.

Where was this condemnation during the appalling electoral fraud committed in the USA on November 2nd?

Moscow's reaction

The reaction from Moscow was more mature and as usual, more in line with the principles of international diplomacy - accepting the results of the election committee and congratulating the man who won - Viktor Yanukovich, with the statement that Moscow accepts whatever decision is taken in the name of the Ukrainian people by Kiev.

Yushchenko - a danger to the Ukraine

The defeated opposition candidate, Viktor Yushchenko, is dangerous in modern-day Ukraine, which has an innate tendency to polarise between East and West, Russian-speakers and Ukrainian-speakers, Russian Orthodox and Ukrainian Orthodox Churches, pro-Moscow and anti-Moscow. Calling on his supporters to take to the streets amounts to insurrection and nothing short of an incitement to revolt.

In politics, as in sport, there is one winner and one loser and those who engage in these activities have to accept that. In the event, the policies of Prime Minister Yanukovich swayed the population to vote for a continuation of the same course of events by 49.72% against 46.7%, rather than the hot-headed sell-out policies preached by Yushchenko.

Western reaction immature and meddlesome

The reaction by the West to the defeat of their puppet candidate was as predictable as it was immature and meddlesome.

Mention of "electoral fraud and abuse" from an American observer was risible, after the two fiascos in the USA which saw the most flagrant examples of vote-rigging and electoral fixing in modern history.

The criticism, upon examination, amounts to what the OSCE observers describe in their initial report as "media bias" and "unauthorised persons" at polling stations. For the information of the OSCE, PRAVDA.Ru contacts in the Ukraine have informed us of a few incidents of violence. The "unauthorised persons" mentioned are police officers and local government officials. Where there is violence, or a threat of violence, police officers are present, in a civilised country. Besides, the deployment of police and government personnel is the prerogative of the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, not the OSCE.

Another ludicrous comment in this report was the complaint that the high voter turnout was "highly suspicious" in the Eastern Ukraine (more favourable to Yanukovich) but then there was no mention of the equally high turnout in areas of the Western Ukraine, where the vote suddenly took on a "strong democratic spirit".

Two weights and two measures

When the Republican Party deploys electronic voting machines bought from Republican Party fundraisers who promised before the election to help the President to win, the OSCE observers describe it as localised and insignificant incidents. However, when the incompent stooge Yushchenko fails to win in the Ukraine, it is fraud.

100,000 fanatics, hooligans and trouble-makers in Independence Square, Kiev, fuelled by a few busloads of drunken layabouts from Western Ukraine with nothing better to do and looking for an adrenalin rush, do not represent the 43,7 million strong population of the country.

The municipalities of Kiev, Lviv and Ivano-Frankivks do not have the jurisdiction to disobey the properly elected authorities.

Like it or lump it

The people of the Ukraine have voted for the continuaqtion of a close relationship with Russia, in the same sphere of influence, which makes sense.

The CIS mission and the Institute of Eastern European Countries monitoring the election declared that it was "legitimate" and "answers the norms of democracy and international law", as declared by the spokesperson, Emir Shleimovich.

If the West has a problem with that - and it appears that "international law" is a concept with which certain countries have a problem to understand these days - too bad.

In plain English, you can like it - or lump it.

http://english.pravda.ru/mailbox/22/101/399/14629_Ukraine.html
§Ukrainian elections turn into farce
by pravda.ru update
Events in Ukraine continue to top international news for the third day in a row. Horror that flooded streets of Ukrainian cities provides significant food for thought. One may get an impression that elections could easily be turned into farce.

Rumors are spreading at an incredible pace these days. It is noteworthy to mention that the more absurd the rumor, the greater the chance that more people will believe it. In actuality however, this is the exact goal politicians have in mind. This time, such statement is true for both sides.

According to one of the rumors, Russian special service units have been deployed to Kiev. Yulia Timoshenko made a statement the other day informing the public of the presence of Russian special service units armed with machine guns inside the administrative building of the Ukrainian president. Prior to this, there were reports of Russian soldiers from special defense unit "Vityaz" at the residential site Irpen located in close proximity to Kiev. One of the Ukrainian editions reported with a reference to a source in "Moscow's special service unit", that military men of that very special service unit have already packed up their stuff and have been awaiting orders to be transferred to Ukraine. This isn"t all however. The following claim made on one of the internet forums can serve as a real apotheosis of this whole story. The statement reads that Russian special service units are wandering the streets of Kiev begging local residents for warm clothes! This is just one of the absurdities that one may read or hear during these tough for Ukrainian democracy days.

Western media in turn is also doing its best to present Russia at its worst. American magazine Nature, which isn"t politically oriented at all, or so it may seem, has nonetheless addressed the issue of Victor Yushchenko. While referring to British toxicologist John Henry from St. Mary"s hospital in London, the magazine claims that Yushchenko"s acne is indicative of dioxine poisoning. Mr. Henry was able to arrive at such conclusion after examining few photographs of the opposition leader.

The aforementioned examples represent the most miniscule part of all the rumors. We are not even discussing the ones that are being spread on the streets. What rumors do people believe in? Obviously, there is no such thing as "Moscow's special service units." It is virtually impossible to diagnose someone with an illness having a mere photo at hand...

All jokes aside, no matter how much criticism current Ukrainian authorities get, opposition's actions are no better, perhaps, even worse. At least, these days there seems to be more disinformation coming from the opposition.
Vasily Bubnov

Read the original in Russian: http://www.pravda.ru/world/2004/5/73/207/18531_fars.html (Translated by: Anna Ossipova)

http://english.pravda.ru/world/20/92/370/14633_.html
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Kevinrwatkins
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