KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine’s judicial system and rule of law have not emerged from  the Viktor Yushchenko era in very good shape, with Ukrainian lawyers and  international monitoring organizations noting a sharp rise in corruption among  judges and prosecutors in the last five years.
The prosecutor general’s office has become a graveyard for criminal cases, a  redundant institution where criminal cases go to linger, stagnate and then be  buried and forgotten.
Surveys of Ukrainian lawyers have found they feel  that instances of political interference in their work have increased  exponentially during the last five years, probably as an outcome of political  instability, crises and in-fighting among the elite.
As political elites  jostled one another for power, they pressured judges and prosecutors to produce  favorable outcomes. We all remember political interference by both sides in the  Constitutional Court in the spring 2007 political crisis, after Yushchenko  disbanded parliament.
A clear instance of political interference is this  week's decision by the Constitutional Court to overturn its 2008 ruling on  parliamentary factions by giving the go-ahead for coalitions to be formed by  factions and individual parliamentary deputies.
The notorious political  decision is reminiscent of the court's 2003 ruling that ex-President Leonid  Kuchma could be a candidate in the 2004 elections as he was serving his “first”  term.
This week's ruling will discredit the Constitutional Court further  and drive a nail into its coffin. The decision will be seen as blatantly  political both in Ukraine and in Europe and Washington, ahead of President  Viktor Yanukovych’s April 12 visit.
The ruling could well turn out to put  Ukraine on a slippery slope towards authoritarianism and, therefore, political  instability.
In addition, there has been very little accomplished in the  important field of protecting foreign investors, despite rhetoric by all  political leaders about making Ukraine friendly for overseas  investment.
In the last two years the World Bank has ranked Georgia three  times better than Ukraine in protecting foreign investors. In terms of ease in  doing business and starting up a business, the World Bank ranks Georgia 7-10  times better than Ukraine.
What went wrong in Ukraine?
And why the  dissimilarity with Georgia following each of the democratic revolutions, which  took place within one year of each other in 2003-2004. The answer is that  Georgia elected a leader who has political will and who operates in a system  where his policies can be enforced.
Nevertheless, Ukraine is not all doom  and gloom and, as ex-President Leonid Kuchma once famously wrote. Ukraine is not  Russia – at least for now. Ukraine’s judicial system is down but not yet  out.
In 2009, Steven Chepa, Norstone Financial Corporation’s president  and chief executive officer, lost a $12 million investment in a corporate raid  on his wood processing factory, Starwood Zakarpattia. For more than a year,  Norstone has fought the attempted takeover through Ukraine’s court system.  Results have been positive.
Well, mostly. As Americans and Canadians  would say, “You can’t make this stuff up:” a low-level state official in  Vinnytsia has set himself above the courts of Kyiv and Trans-Carpathia.  Disregard for the law has reached astounding proportions.
As Chepa said:  “As astonishing as it is that private security guards are capable of  intimidating the police to the point where they would rather withdraw than  enforce the law, it is absolutely incredible that a district registrar would  dare to disobey instructions issued by the Kiev Administrative Court of  Appeal.”
Two court rulings – issued by the Kiev Administrative Court of  Appeal’s Judge Saprykina on Jan. 6 and March 3 – made it necessary for the  government registrar to register ownership of Starwood Zakarpattia with  Norstone. In 2009, the corporate raiders were able to exert sufficient influence  to have Starwood Zakarpattia registered as their property in the hope of asset  stripping the factory and thus appropriating Norstone’s multi-million dollar  investment.
A third court ruling – this by the Trans-Carpathian  administrative court and dated March 17 – also supports Norstone’s case that it  was the victim of an illegal corporate raid and calls for the re-registration of  Starwood Zakarpattia where it rightfully belongs. Three court rulings should be  sufficient to enforce the matter; or so Norstone thought.
It would seem  that under the Ukrainian system the same office that knowingly registered  Starwood Zakarpattia illegally with the corporate raiders is now required to  re-register Starwood Zakarpattia with its rightful owners.
This is like  asking the fox who stole the chicken to give it back. Is it merely coincidence  that the registry office is Vinnytsia, home turf for the corporate  raiders?
The registry’s bureaucrats have refused to abide by three court  rulings, placing themselves above the rule of law. This is legal anarchy!  Bureaucrats have no basis on which to refuse to abide by iron-clad court rulings  – especially when they come in threes.
It is simply unimaginable that a  notary in a European or North American democracy could refuse to abide by a  court ruling. The consequences would be a fine, immediate dismissal, or even  jail.
The actions of the Vinnytsia notary make a mockery of Ukraine’s  judicial system. Indeed, what is the point of court rulings if they cannot be  enforced?
The Vinnytsia notary is effectively blocking the re-opening of  the Starwood Zakarpattia factory, depriving an economically depressed region  (Trans-Carpathia) that is part of a country (Ukraine) that, alongside Latvia and  Hungary, experienced some of the worst effects of the global financial  crisis.
When up and running, Starwood Zakarpattia will employ 100  Trans-Carpathians: one small but significant step in helping Ukraine emerge from  its severe economic downturn.
Chepa expressed his shock at the actions of  the notary in undermining Ukrainian justice in a letter sent to Mykhailo  Brodsky, the new head of the State Committee on Regulatory Politics and  Enterprises.
Andriy Portnov, newly appointed deputy head of the  presidential administration with responsibility for legal reforms, should also  be made aware of the legal quagmire that Ukraine’s legal system has sunk  into.
Foreign investment and capital are crucial for the modernization of  Ukraine’s economy and vital for economically depressed regions such as  Transcarpathia. That is why preventing corporate raiding of foreign investors  should be a priority for Brodsky and Portnov.
 
1 comment:
You are plagiarising content from the Kyiv Post and not including myself as the the author. This is illegal and has been reported to the host of the blog, Google.
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