Showing posts with label moldova. Show all posts
Showing posts with label moldova. Show all posts

Sunday, 14 March 2010

Moldovan, Ukrainian premiers discuss ties by phone

Chisinau - Prime Minister Vlad Filat today had a telephone conversation with his Ukrainian counterpart, Nikolay Aazarov, the government's press service has said.

Filat congratulated Azarov on his appointment to this position and wished him success in his further activities.

The Moldovan premier pointed out the positive dynamics registered in the Moldovan-Ukrainian bilateral relations in the last months, particularly emphasizing intergovernmental cooperation.

Filat said that on this period the relations between the two states had been unblocked and solutions to a string of year-long problems had been identified. In particular, he emphasized the issue of free movement of people and goods that was solved.

The two prime ministers spoke in favour of further deepening cooperation relations in the benefit of people from both countries, noting that particular attention would be paid to economic relations.

The sides spoke about regional cooperation between Moldova and Ukraine and advocated consolidated efforts in this direction.

Sunday, 11 October 2009

Moldova, Russia Differ on Troop Withdrawal

CHISINAU, Molodova — Russia told Moldova's new western-leaning leadership on Thursday that it would not pull its troops out of the breakaway Transdnestr region until a peace deal with separatists was in place there.
Moldova has said it would use a summit of presidents of the Commonwealth of Independent States, opening in the Moldovan capital of Chisinau on Friday, to press Russia to withdraw its soldiers from Transdnestr.
Moscow has a peacekeeping force of about 1,200 soldiers stationed since 1992 in the rebel territory, a mainly Russian-speaking sliver of land bordering Ukraine.
But Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, speaking after a meeting of CIS foreign ministers, told reporters that this should take place only in the context of a 2003 Russian proposal.
The so-called Kozak memorandum foresaw an "assymetrical federation" between Moldova and Transdnestr, giving the latter strong autonomy rights and the right to secede if Moldova merged with Romania, its neighbor with which it shares a common historic and linguistic heritage.
But Moldova's then-President Vladimir Voronin, a staunch Communist, refused to sign the memorandum. Voronin stood down last month after losing a parliamentary election in July to pro-European parties, potentially moving the small nation away from Russia.
"Our military contingent is in Transdnestr ... because we guard huge stocks of weaponry, the withdrawal of which was suspended because the former leadership of Moldova wrecked the Kozak memorandum," Lavrov said.
In the past few years, Russian officials preferred not to revive the memories of the failed "Kozak memorandum," which is seen as one of Moscow's most humiliating defeats.
Then-President Vladimir Putin, and his successor, Dmitry Medvedev, have said they would accept any deal that Transdnestr and Chisinau could reach.
Moldova wants to install an international peacekeeping force in the rebel region of 600,000 people.
Russia, Moldova and Transdnestr agreed in March that an international force could replace Russian peacekeepers once a peace deal is reached, but there is no sign of a breakthrough on an accord.
Transdnestr broke away from Moldova in 1990, fearing that it would unite with neighboring Romania. That never happened, but the region continues to insist on independence.
Transdnestr wants integration with Russia, although they do not share a common border.
Moldovan Foreign Minister Yurie Leanca, however, told reporters on Thursday, "New realities require new approaches to be found for settling the Transdnestr problem. As far as the Kozak memorandum is concerned — that was an event of long ago."
A group of demonstrators from parties belonging to the Alliance for European Integration, the new coalition in power in Moldova, rallied outside the foreign ministers' meeting.
Many carried flags with slogans such as "EU-Yes, CIS-No!" A group from the ecological party "Green Alliance" chanted, "We do not want war! Russia, take away your arms!"

Sunday, 12 April 2009

Moldova Seeks Extradition Of Business Tycoon From Ukraine

CHISINAU, Moldova -- Moldova has demanded the extradition of a businessman detained in Ukraine recently, a source in the Prosecutor General's Office said on Thursday.
Ukrainian media earlier reported Gabriel Stati, one of Moldova's richest people, had been detained.The Ukrainian Interior Ministry has neither confirmed nor denied the detention.The Moldovan Prosecutor General's Office has said Stati could have been involved in sponsoring and masterminding the latest protests in Chisinau, although the source did not specify what he was accused of.Protests against the ruling Communist Party's victory in Sunday's elections turned violent on Tuesday, with some 10,000 rioters seizing of the presidential residence and nearby parliament building.Some 170 police officers and more than 100 civilians were injured in the clashes.

Sunday, 16 November 2008

Russia Accuses Kiev Of Using Holodomor To Divert Attention

Russia Accuses Kiev Of Using Holodomor To Divert Attention -UNTIED NATIONS, NY -- Ukraine is using the issue of the 1932-33 famine to divert the nation's attention from the ongoing political and economic crisis, Russia's envoy to the UN said on Tuesday.
Ukraine has been seeking international recognition for the Stalin-era famine, known as the Holodomor, as an act of genocide by the Soviet authorities following a similar move by Ukraine's Supreme Rada in late 2006.The United Nations General Committee refused last Thursday to include the famine on its agenda, supporting Russia's recommendation to exclude the Holodomor from the UN session.Said Vitaly Churkin: "The Ukrainian leadership is using this historical humanitarian tragedy for its own political ends, as well as to spread ethnic animosity... and divert the attention of its own people from the ongoing political and economic crisis in Ukraine."He said the issue was being politicized, as was evident from, among other things, Ukraine's attempt to include the issue in the UN agenda.A senior Ukrainian MP said on Friday that the UN's recognition of the Holodomor would give Kiev legal grounds to claim moral and financial damages from Russia.The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Thursday declaring the famine of 1932-1933, that caused the deaths of millions of Ukrainians, a crime against humanity.The European Parliament stopped short of using the word "genocide." Its resolution "recognizes the Holodomor (the artificial famine of 1932-1933 in Ukraine) as an appalling crime against the Ukrainian people, and against humanity."According to the resolution, the Holodomor "was cynically and cruelly planned by [Soviet leader Joseph] Stalin's regime in order to force through the Soviet Union's policy of collectivization of agriculture against the will of the rural population in Ukraine."Estimates vary widely as to the number of deaths in Ukraine in the early 1930s caused by the forced collectivization, along with the devastating purges of the Ukrainian intelligentsia, religious leaders and politicians under Stalin. Some sources cite figures of over 7 million.The EU parliament also urged "the countries which emerged following the break-up of the Soviet Union to open up their archives on the Holodomor in Ukraine of 1932-1933 to comprehensive scrutiny so that all the causes and consequences can be revealed and fully investigated."Russia has consistently rejected Ukraine's interpretation of the tragic events.In July 2008, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe adopted a resolution that condemned the famine but stopped short of recognizing it as an act of genocide
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Yatsenyuk: Parliament Will Adopt Unpopular Conditions In Exchange For IMF Aid
KIEV, Ukraine -- The International Monetary Fund won agreement Monday from the speaker of Ukraine's parliament to enact potentially unpopular conditions for a crucial $16.5 billion loan, as it grew clearer the IMF may have to help other emerging markets in Europe in the grip of the global financial crisis
The IMF, which is also talking to Hungary and Belarus, is requiring that Ukraine adopt strict and likely unpopular measures in what could become a new dose of austerity for emerging economies in a region that had shown strong growth in recent years but now are suffering as investors and money flee.Under the IMF's expected proposals, the fund will provide regular disbursements of dollars to Ukraine in return for tough domestic measures such as lowering inflation, reducing budget deficits and government spending.The hope is that the availability of instant dollars will help Ukraine save its banking systems, support its faltering currency and avoid defaulting on its debt. The IMF hasn't made the conditions public, but provisions in draft legislation indicate they might include reducing government wages and pensions and subsidies for household utilities, as well as increasing taxes on gasoline, alcohol, tobacco and car imports, say experts.It won't be an easy ride in Ukraine's crisis-hit parliament though. Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko is fighting an order by President Viktor Yushchenko to holdearly parliamentary elections in December. Each main parliamentary faction has put forward its own anti-crisis laws, some of which coincide with the IMF requirements and speaker Arseniy Yatsenyuk said he will try to work out a single package that all can agree on."Parliament will meet until the moment when the necessary package of economic legislation has been passed," Yatsenyuk told reporters Monday. "We have no choice. It is not a political issue, it is an issue of the country's vital activity."Analysts say Ukraine is in for a painful economic downturn. Output in the steel industry, which accounts for 6 percent of the GDP and 40 percent of the country's exports, is down by 30 percent. Meanwhile the hryvna currency plunged to a historic low of 6.01 to the dollar last week as a run on banks stripped the banking sector of $3.4 billion.Hungary has also faced currency difficulties, which also prompted its government to approach the IMF for emergency loans.Though details of the Hungarian package will not emerge for a few days, the IMF said the European Union, individual governments and other institutions will be involved. On Oct. 16, the European Central Bank said it was ready to lend Hungary up to 5 billion euros ($6.2 billion) to support liquidity on its foreign exchange market.The IMF said a "broad agreement" for a "substantial financing package" has been agreed with the Hungarian authorities.The Hungarian and Ukrainian deal is unlikely to be the last. Belarus is expected to meet with an IMF delegation this week. The IMF has already agreed to loan Iceland $2.1 billion."The inescapable bottom line is that the IMF's work in emerging Europe has only just begun," said Neil Shearing, emerging Europe economist at Capital Economics.Shearing says those countries with larger needs for foreign-currency financing than both Hungary and Uktraine may also have to go to the IMF for emergency assistance. He cites Turkey, which needs nearly $190 billion in foreign financing in 2008, as a likely candidate."A recent visit to Istanbul has convinced us that Turkey is much closer to calling on the Fund for financial assistance than many in the markets believe," said Shearing.Shearing says other countries touted as possible IMF recipients include Romania, Estonia, Latvia and Bulgaria, especially if they continue to use up their foreign exchange reserves paying for imports, supporting their currencies and rolling over debts.Neil Mellor, currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon, thinks the Baltic countries and Bulgaria are particularly exposed to the turmoil in the global financial markets.He said Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania have heavy foreign currency needs for things like funding trade deficits and debt repayments of 60 percent, 52 percent and 35 percent of gross domestic product, a factor that can weigh heavily on a country's currency. Bulgaria needs 55 percent of economic output."Moreover, these countries also have large gross external liabilities (short and long term debt), led by Latvia with 120 opercent of GDP, and followed by Estonia with 100 percent and Bulgaria with 97 percent," said Mellor.Though the IMF only has around $200 billion to distribute, it is thought that Western governments may supplement the available pool. There was even speculation last week that the IMF was planning a $1 trillion injection into emerging markets to stave off defaults.Analysts said the Ukraine and Hungary announcements suggest there's little or no chance that the IMF will sponsor a more lenient comprehensive approach to help countries seriously affected by the global financial crisis."This illustrates how the IMF isn't stepping away from its conditionality approach and therefore leave us rather doubtful about an IMF-led effort for emerging markets this week," said BNP Paribas currency strategist Elisabeth Gruie.

Early Election Still In Doubt As Parliament Fights

KIEV, Ukraine -- The nation still wonders when, or if, an early poll will happen. The parliamentary election date remains unclear since President Victor Yushchenko suspended his decree on Oct. 20 dissolving parliament so that the lawmakers could vote for emergency measures to combat the economic crisis.
What is clear is that the date Yushchenko insists on, Dec. 14, is unrealistically early.“Elections won’t be held until Jan. 21, if they are held at all,” said Oleksandr Chernenko, analyst of Committee of Voters of Ukraine, a non-governmental organization.A date during the prolonged Christmas and New Year holidays would be risky because the turnout could be much less than 50 percent, invalidating the vote.The election will cost Hr 417 million, but Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko’s allies have blocked the vote.The latest attempt to allocate cash on Oct. 29 ended up just four votes short of the 226-vote majority.Some experts say Yushchenko will cancel elections because of dwindling support for his bloc.Our Ukraine would get from 3 to 6 percent, according to recent polls, while its main competitors, Tymoshenko’s bloc and the Party of Regions – would get more than 25 percent, according to a recent Kyiv International Institute of Sociology poll.
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Victor Yushchenko Attacked With His Own Weapon
KIEV, Ukraine -- The scandal over Ukrainian arms sales to Georgia continues unabated in Kiev. Head of the Rada ad hoc investigation commission Valery Konovalyuk from the Party of Regions accused Ukraine’s Government of “pressurizing” his colleagues and him, but despite this fact, he promised to complete the investigation he started and ask President Yushchenko unpleasant questionIn addition, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev promised “not to forget” those who had armed the Mikhail Saakashvili regime. However, according to the information of Kommersant, Moscow doesn’t know yet how to punish Kiev for supporting Tbilisi.Investigation maniaAfter a short period of lull, a scandal over Ukraine’s arms supplies to Georgia broke out anew, with Head of the Rada ad hoc investigation commission Valery Konovalyuk from the Party of Regions being the key newsmaker.Yesterday Mr Konovalyuk held a press conference in Kiev, where he told reporters about the progress in investigating the country’s high-ranking officials’ power abuse. According to the MP, during its work, the commission managed to collect so much proof that it will be enough for making Ukraine’s top politicians answer. “We have enough evidence to raise the question of bureaucrats’ responsibility,” the head of the commission stated.Saying that he doesn’t mean impeaching Mr Yushchenko yet, Mr Konovalyuk added that his investigation bodes ill for the President. “We are preparing a report to be delivered in the Parliament. We have coordinated it with several parties that, regardless of the political crisis in the country, we will present the report in the Rada.”However, before making the collected data public, Valery Konovalyuk and his colleagues plan to tour Georgia and South Ossetia to collect extra information. “It will allow us to make preliminary conclusions, which will prompt the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office and other law enforcement bodies to react to the irregularities the commission has found,” the MP said complaining that he has to work under the Government’s pressure. “The Government pressurizes us. We warned that various provocations will be carried out to impede the commission’s work, but we are determined to take the investigation to the end.”Those PersecutedMr Konovalyuk’s commission was set up on September 2. By the way, this date is considered the outset of the current political crisis in Ukraine. On that day the “orange” coalition, formed by the Yuliya Tymoshenko Bloc (BYuT) and the pro-presidential bloc “Our Ukraine – People’s Self-defense”. The democratic alliance collapsed after the BYuT and the Party of Regions, despite Our Ukraine’s resistance, took through the Parliament laws that significantly cut the head’s of state powers.Victor Yushchenko was denied the right to participate in the Government’s meetings and legalized the impeachment procedure – it now requires 226 MPs’ signatures (there are 450 members of the Rada in total). The Party of Regions intended to adopt a resolution to recognize Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but this idea was not endorsed by the majority, and it all ended with setting up a commission to investigate arms supplies to Georgia.Within two months the commission made no revealing documents public, which would point to the Government’s power abuse when exporting Ukrainian weaponry. Nevertheless, the commission’s members often drop hints that it was President Yushchenko who sanctioned violating the law. Valery Konovalyuk stated on several occasions that his commission has found facts of illegal arms supplies to Georgia, which was controlled by the President. Much speculation was caused by the commission head’s statement that the Ukrainian Government supplied a Buk-M1 missile system, which guarded Ukraine’s border. Last time Mr Konovalyuk “agitated” the public on October 8, when he stated that the commission got information from the treasury that the lion’s share of the funds, raised from arms sales, was directed neither to the Ukrainian federal budget nor the Defense Ministry. According to the MP, Ukraine has sold weaponry worth $2 billion since 2005, whereas the budget received only $160,000 of it. It need be said that no documents were then demonstrated to the public.A crime Without ElementsVictor Yushchenko’s administration denies violating any international legal norms as far as military and technical cooperation with Georgia is concerned. Yesterday head of the Military Security Department of Ukraine’s Security Council Sergei Khimchenko stated that Kiev “cooperates with Tbilisi in accordance with its national interests and international law”. According to him, the UN Security Council, the OSCE, the EU or any other IOs have never imposed any sanctions or embargoes on Georgia. Mr Khimchenko made no secret of the fact that Ukraine increased its military export volume to Georgia by third in 2007-2008, adding that the two countries cooperate according to an agreement of July 4, 1997. “Approximately to 40%,” he said when asked to what extent arms supplies grew.Moreover, Mr Khimchenko stated that Ukraine will keep on supplying weaponry to Georgia in accordance with concluded agreements. “We are not supplying arms there now, but the agreements we signed before, are valid,” the official told Kommersant. At the same time he denied accusations of supplying arms to Georgia during the military conflict and Ukrainian soldiers’ participation in hostilities. According to him, the latest arms delivery was according to a contract signed a year ago.Mr Khimchenko’s statement was a response to Russian officials’ accusations of illegally arming Georgia. Early this month Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called Ukraine’s arms supplies to Georgia a “crime” when receiving is Ukrainian counterpart Yuliya Tymoshenko in Moscow. “I believe that there can be no worse crime than arms supplies to a conflict zone. Missile systems were used to kill soldiers, which can’t but worry us,” Mr Putin said after talks with Ms Tymoshenko. Speaking about Ukrainian military specialists’ participation in the August five-day war, the Russian Prime Minister cut it short, “It was a crime.”Yesterday Russia’s officials once again brought up this issue. During a meeting of a commission on military and technical cooperation President Dmitry Medvedev stated that, in its foreign policy, Russia will consider the actions of the countries that supplied arms to the Mikhail Saakashvili regime. Although Medvedev did not mention Ukraine, his statement implies that Moscow views Kiev as the main culprit. “We are aware that several states supplied arms to the Mikhail Saakashvili regime, which encouraged it to launch aggression, and now they are reloading the regime with extra weaponry,” Mr Medvedev said. “Unfortunately, several states that are friendly to Russia, took part in it. We won’t forget it. We will consider it in our foreign policy.”Yesterday Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov explained the essence of Moscow’s claims. According to the official, there are a lot of international documents regulating arms trade, which were signed by Ukraine’s officials. “These include the OSCE document of 1993 about conventional weapons and small arms. But in Ukraine’s case heavy assault arms were delivered. Kiev doesn’t even deny that it supplied it to Georgia shortly before the military conflict,” Mr Ryabkov told Kommersant. “We are going to raise this issue in all international formats, and we regret that the Ukrainian party is no even ashamed of its actions.” The diplomat complained that it is impossible to punish Ukraine with international sanctions, “Sanctions are the UN Security Council’s prerogative. All our attempts to impose embargo on arms supplies to Georgia were blocked by the countries conniving at the aggressor.”Interestingly, Moscow has no own proof of the Ukrainian Government’s illegal arms trafficking. “I have no information that Russia is investigating the matter,” Igor Lyalkin-Frolov from the Russian Foreign Ministry Information and Press Department told Kommersant. “We’ll see what results Ukraine’s parliamentary commission reports.”It is not ruled out that Russia will respond with concrete actions at the final stage of Ukraine’s electoral campaign – voting has been postponed.
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Conditions Still Poor, Unhealthy In Ukraine's Prisons
KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine’s draconian prisons breed disease, are overcrowded and inmates are treated inhumanely. Prisons, by design, aren’t supposed to be pleasant places. But they’re also not supposed to be deadly places, as they are all too often in Ukraine – a consequence of under-funding, overcrowding, brutality and poor medical care.
“Those taken into custody and placed in SIZO [pretrial detention centers] should not be sent to the morgue afterwards,” said Nina Karpacheva, Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman.But too many of them are.The Ukrainian penal system consists of 183 institutions with 150,000 inmates. The mortality rate in prisons rose by 33 percent in the first seven months of the year, to 1.2 cases per 1,000 inmates, compared to the same period a year ago. The situation was worse in pre-trial detention facilities, according to the State Penitentiary Department. Mortality increased 47 percent, to 2.8 deaths per 1,000 inmates in the first seven months of 2008, compared to the same period a year ago.Karpacheva has been investigating the situation and is calling for improvements.“Unfortunately, the problem with Ukrainian prisons is principally one of a systematic and well-established nature, which can not be changed immediately. And only essential legislative and judicial reforms can solve the major problems of Ukrainian penitentiaries,” Karpacheva said.Among her ideas are simply sending fewer people to prison or detention centers by setting higher standards for police who, she contends, are still making too many dubious arrests. Judges should also make more use of non-prison alternatives for punishment, especially for juveniles.The lack of financing, certainly, is an issue. Karpacheva said that less than Hr 3 was spent in 2007 daily for the treatment of those ill with tuberculosis and notes that prison employees are still poorly paid.Most deaths in confinement, she said, are a consequence of poor medical care, with people dying of untreated or undiagnosed illnesses. “Efficient diagnostic methods in Ukrainian penitentiary establishments should be the first step to solving tuberculosis, AIDS/HIV and high mortality rate problems,” Karpacheva said.Among the deadliest places, Kyiv’s pre-trial detention center No. 13 stands out with 24 recorded unnatural deaths among 2,800 inmates in a four-month period in 2007 alone. Of the 24 deaths, two were classified as murders, while three were suicides.The rest, Karpacheva said, “were the result of illnesses and the incapability of medical personnel to save a human life. An analysis of the illnesses that caused death showed that, among 17 inmates, only 6 could have been infected after arriving at the facility. The rest were when they were already ill, but their diseases were not diagnosed in time.”And some cases are just tragic mysteries, such as the death in 2007 of Serhiy Karashchenko. According to Karpacheva, the 34-year-old Karashchenko was transferred on July 13, 2007, despite obvious symptoms of illness, from the temporary police jail in Bila Tserkva to a pre-trial detention center in Kyiv.When he arrived, Karashchenko was diagnosed with an advanced stage of pulmonary tuberculosis and placed in quarantine. Within 34 days, he was dead.Less than two months earlier, on May 24, 2007, a hospital in Bila Tserkva provided a medical certificate declaring Karashchenko to be in good physical shape – even though he weighed only 47 kilograms despite being 180 centimeters tall.Untreated physical illnesses are not the only problem. Undiagnosed psychological problems can have deadly consequences, too. Such was the case involving an inmate who strangled a cellmate.Court medical experts recognized the inmate, Serhiy Kulishev, a prisoner of Kyiv pre-trial detention facility No. 13, as mentally and emotionally unstable. He should have been sent to solitary confinement and been kept under constant observation by a psychiatrist. Instead, he was placed in a prison medical center with two men, one of whom he strangled.Lack of proper psychological care is one of the major problems in penitentiaries, Vasyl Koshynets, head of State Penitentiary Department, told Channel 5 TV. He told the news program that there are 600 inmates for every psychologist, who work “for nothing.”Self-inflicted injuries and other types of violence happen frequently.According to the United States State Department, which gives annual human rights ratings, such incidents are often “a result of harsh treatment of prisoners by facility staff, who beat prisoners and destroyed their food during the year the media reported several incidents of prisoner-on-prisoner violence in pretrial detention facilities with fatalities.”Indeed, human rights groups have been expressing their concerns. On March 27, for example, 40 inmates in a Kharkiv Oblast prison hurt themselves to protest the “horrible conditions and inhumane treatment from personnel,” according to the Helsinki Human Rights group, citing a Vinnytsya human rights group.However, in Holos Ukrainy newspaper, Ukrainian General Prosecutor Oleksandr Medvedko denied many claims of abuse and abusive conditions. He said the accusations are “constantly supplemented by vivid and emotional, though, generally unproven description of pictures of mass torture, supposedly widely used against prisoners by the administration of [pre-trial detention centers] and penal institutions.”Overall, the U.S. State Department – in its annual human rights assessment – still considers Ukrainian prisons and detention centers as not meeting international standards. Karpacheva said the worst place in Ukraine might be the Sevastopol temporary police holding facility.“Stench, unsanitary conditions, lack of fresh air and daylight, concrete floors … Every second cell doesn’t have individual sleeping places — inmates (including women) are forced to take turns sleeping on a bed,” Karpacheva said. “Despite the established limit of 82 people, the facility hosts 112 people every day on average.” She also said 10 percent of inmates in a survey had been detained for more than 10 days, beyond the limits set by Ukrainian law for pre-detention confinement.Despite the government's permission for visits by independent human rights monitors, Oleksandr Bukalov, leader of Donetsk Memorial, a rights group, said the public has little oversight over prisons. “The state penitentiary department demonstrates a strong unwillingness to promote public control in its establishments. Its administration is satisfied with the situation where declarations about public control are proclaimed, but in reality, do not exist,” Bukalov said.Overall, conditions are improving slowly, according to the U.S. State Department. Even Karpacheva said that “conditions in many prisons and pre-trial facilities were essentially improved and now meet international standards.” But she also said most of the changes are “small improvements.”
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Faina Crew Still Waits For Rescue
KIEV, Ukraine -- The fate of the ship’s crew still unknown despite efforts on many fronts. “Tell them, I am alive.” That is the message that Yevgeniy Grigoriev, a Latvian hostage on the pirate-captured vessel MV Faina, wanted to pass on to his worried relatives. Grigoriev was speaking by telephone with Nina Karpacheva, Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, who recently returned from a trip to Kenya.
At a press conference on Oct. 27 in Kyiv, Karpacheva gave an update on the state of negotiations to free the 20-member crew of mostly Ukrainians. The crew and their arms-laden vessel were taken hostage on Sept. 25 by Somalian pirates who are still demanding a multi-million-dollar ransom.On Oct. 21, Karpacheva was able to speak from Kenya by telephone with other members of the crew, including Grigoriev. “The negotiation process to liberate the Faina crew is coming to a decisive stage,” Karpacheva told journalists.At last word, 17 Ukrainians, 2 Russians and 1 Latvian were alive on board – a fact Karpacheva was able to confirm during her telephone conversation. Tragedy, however, struck soon after the seizure, when the Russian crew captain died of natural causes.Karpacheva said she is hopeful the standoff will have a happy ending. Relatives of the crew, meanwhile, have reportedly been trying to raise money to free their loved ones.In other meetings on her trip, Karpacheva said that Mohamed Ali Nur, Somalia’s ambassador to Kenya, assured her that “pirates never kill the crew.”The ombudsman said negotiations, not force, should be used to end the stalemate. “Everything possible has to be done so that power is not applied under any circumstances,” she said.She joined the rising chorus of international voices calling for stronger action against piracy at sea, including stronger patrols. She also said that she gained an understanding of the extent to which Somalia, which is caught up in an Islamic insurgency, has become a failed and lawless nation.“The last two generations of Somalians were brought up without a school education,” Karpacheva said. “These youngsters know nothing but how to hold a gun and follow the orders of those who stand behind them. These are the type of people who captured the vessel. The youngest of them is only 14. It’s essential to find out who is really manipulating these boys and runs this black market if we want to fight the piracy.”Karpacheva also called on the owner of the ship, Vadim Alperin, to pay compensation to the kidnapped crew. “I truly hope he will be guided by moral values as well,” Karpacheva said.The ship contains a cargo of 33 battle tanks and heavy weaponry. Its seizure has focused international attention on the pirate menace off the Horn of Africa. Ships of the U.S. Navy’s 5th Fleet have surrounded the Faina for more than a month to be sure the cargo does not get into the hands of insurgent groups linked to al-Qaida.According to the Associated Press, the pirates’ spokesman, Sugule Ali, said they received a fax on Oct. 17 from Viktor Murenko, head of ship operator Tomex Team, saying Kenya had declined to pay any ransom for the cargo it claims.
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A High-Ranking Smoker Keeps Cigarette Prices Low In Nation
KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukrainian Finance Minister Victor Pynzenyk can touch the clouds without opening the windows on the eighth floor of his government office.He sits in his own cloud of dense cigarette smoke while drafting anti-crisis plans for the nation.One of the best economists in Ukraine, he is also one of the most notorious chain smokers.“During the five minutes that I was there, he had five cigarettes,” said parliamentarian Oleh Lyashko from Yulia Tymoshenko’s party, describing the minister’s vice.Public health advocates blame Pynzenyk for some of the cheapest cigarettes and, consequently, one of the highest smoking rates in the world by resisting meaningful tax hikes on the deadly products.About 40 percent of the nation’s adults light up regularly, while many popular brands still sell for $1 or less a pack. In Western nations that have cut smoking rates, cigarette taxes have pushed retail prices to $5 or more per pack.“Enough cringing before tobacco giants,” said Hanna Hopko from the Washington, D.C.-based non-profit organization, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.Together with some 20 other anti-smoking activists, she picketed the Cabinet of Ministers earlier this week.“The government has decided to raise taxes on virtually everything - alcohol, cars, gas and land in the face of a financial crisis. But cigarettes seem to be omitted on purpose,” said Hopko, referring to the latest economic plan drafted by Pynzenyk.Based on World Health Organization (WHO) research, higher cigarette prices are the most effective way to get adults to quit smoking and to prevent children from starting.The finance minister, however, is against the hike. “Raising excise taxes will result in smuggling from Russia, Belarus and Moldova,” Pynzenyk said. “Money from cigarette sales will go to these countries.”Driven by budget needs for flood relief in western Ukraine this summer, Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko managed to push a 10 percent per pack tax hike through parliament. She wanted taxes on cigarettes increased much more.But her ally Pynzenyk, together with President Victor Yushchenko opposed such an abrupt increase, echoing tobacco industry arguments that predict the black market would surge, raising even less for state coffers.They failed, however, to suggest an alternative on how to reduce smoking today.Tobacco ads still prevail over social campaigns in outdoor and print media and also find their way onto late-night television and radio.A stricter, but still not complete, nationwide ban on advertising will only come into effect next year, when billboard ads will be removed.The Kyiv City Council took a bold step and partially restricted smoking in public places like bus stops, schools and subways.But a single trip through the underground passageway at Independence Square shows that people ignore the rule continuing to smoke even next to the “no smoking” signs.Lawmakers went further and banned cigarettes from workplaces and government buildings altogether.But many, including Pynzenyk, continue to smoke inside.Parliament and other government toilets stink of tobacco fumes.The fact that Ukraine is a smoker’s paradise is written even in travel guides. “You can expect a lot of second-hand smoke in just about any restaurant or bar, although under law they must offer no-smoking sections,” reads the latest edition of the Thomas Cook travel guide.According to the WHO, more than 100,000 Ukrainians die of diseases caused by smoking annually.Nevertheless, certain politicians insist that raising taxes will contribute to smuggling from the neighboring countries.“Smuggling is a corruption problem. Stop telling us tales,” said Hopko of Tobacco-Free Kids. “Let’s fire customs officials or give them fair wages to avoid illicit trade, otherwise we’ll all go up in smoke.”Health advocates agree that smuggling may become an issue if prices rise drastically above those in Russia or Moldova. A pack of Marlboro cigarettes in Ukraine, however, is still cheaper by a third compared to a Russian pack. So there is room for improvement.“Moldova won’t feed Ukraine because Romania is closer and more profitable,” said Hopko, slamming Pynzenyk’s reasons for freezing excise taxes.The finance minister, however, remains at odds not only with anti-smoking activists.“Ukraine has the lowest taxes on cigarettes in the world, three to four times less than other countries,” Tymoshenko said in advocating for even higher duties. The first hike enforced in September generated an additional $200 million for Ukraine’s budget.A further increase of Hr 1.50 per pack could bring another billion dollars to the budget, specifies a new bill registered in the parliament.Why the measure failed to make it into Pynzenyk’s anti-crisis proposal is open for discussion. The finance minister, drawing up rescue plans like reaching for the crimeajewel for the nation, was too busy to comment.Oleh Lyashko from Tymoshenko’s party suggested that Pynzenyk did not want to pay more for the cigarettes he smokes in large quantities.“It’s impossible to stay long in his office, and he has really bad breath,” said Lyashko, who smoked for 15 years and quit recently.“He told me that they raised taxes two months ago and did not want to do it so soon again,” he added, denying a link between the minister and the tobacco industry.