Friday 18 February 2011

NATO May Draw Ukraine In Discussing Plans To Deploy Missile Defense In Europe

KIEV, Ukraine -- NATO is ready in the future to involve Ukraine into discussing the deployment of missile defenses in Europe.
James Appathurai, NATO Secretary General's Special Representative for the Caucasus and Central Asia, said this at a news conference in Moscow, as the UKRINFORM correspondent in Russia reported.

At this stage, NATO, he said, is in talks on this issue only with Russia, but the alliance's secretary-general is very well aware of the importance of a coordinated defense for Europe's future.

That's why, Appathurai said, they hope to continue the discussion (of the ABM issue) and start cooperating with other countries.

So all the European nations, including Ukraine, must be sure that the task is not to conduct a watershed in Europe, but to provide common defense, he added.

The Special Representative also said they respect the choice of the Ukrainian government and the Ukrainian people to have a non-aligned status. But the intention to cooperate with Ukraine since then has not diminished, and NATO continues to remember the obligations assumed in Bucharest, he noted.

According to Appathurai, it seems clear to the alliance that the Ukrainian government intends to further develop its cooperation with NATO in various fields.

He also indicated that Ukraine is actively continuing to participate in NATO operations.

As reported, in early November 2010, NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen, during his visit to Moscow, said he did not rule out the inclusion of the Ukrainian early warning systems in Sevastopol and Mukacheve in the European missile defense system.

November 23 in Warsaw, Secretary of National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine Raisa Bohatyriova stated that Ukraine was ready to take part in the European missile defense system that NATO planned to create to protect Europe and the US.

December 15, NSDC First Deputy Secretary Stepan Havrysh said that Ukraine could take part in the creation of NATO missile defense system only together with Russia.

Ukraine Needs To Improve Business Environment, Says IMF Resident Representative

KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine needs to take steps to improve its business environment, Resident Representative of the International Monetary Fund in Ukraine Max Alier has said.
"…An important issue, which needs to be considered but doesn't receive enough attention, is the business environment. At the macro level, the indicators seem to be positive, and this can be seen in several sectors: demand is reviving, consumption is resuming, the economy is emerging from crisis. However, problems are being exposed, ranging from tax legislation, management, administration, laws, and customs. In agriculture, there are quotas on grain exports that are allocated absolutely non-transparently," Alier said during the 4th Annual Summit "Ukrainian Real Estate and Construction" organized by Adam Smith Institute in Kyiv on Wednesday.

According to Alier, the business environment in Ukraine is not getting better, but worse.

He noted that without improving its business environment, the country would not be able to realize its full potential and significantly speed up its economic growth.

Alier also stressed the need for structural reforms in the country.

There are some structural reforms that are currently lagging behind in Ukraine, compared with other countries, but it is very important that they should be carried out, he said.

How To Turn A 'Partly Free' Ukraine Into A 'Not Free' Ukraine

KIEV, Ukraine -- Some Western policymakers continue to argue that Ukraine's political system is unlikely to evolve into a full authoritarian system along the lines of Russia and Belarus, President Viktor Yanukovych will slow down his authoritarian blitzkrieg, they argue, and the system will stabilize into a semi-authoritarian system.
In other words, Ukraine will stabilize at "partly free," the semi-authoritarian status that Freedom House gave it throughout the Leonid Kuchma era and to which it returned in 2010 after Yanukovych's first year in office.

An alternative viewpoint that's gaining ground is that Ukraine will decline further to "not free," the full authoritarian status that independent Ukraine has never held. If this were to take place, Ukraine would join the eight authoritarian CIS countries (Russia, Belarus, Azerbaijan, and the five Central Asian states) that are classified as "not free" by the U.S.-based rights watchdog.

The Yanukovych administration has moved farther down the path of authoritarianism in only one year in office than Kuchma did in a decade. Both administrations resorted to taking political prisoners.

Under Kuchma, members of UNA-UNSO (Ukrainian National Assembly-Ukrainian People's Self-Defense) were imprisoned for their alleged involvement in the March 2001 riots. Under Yanukovych, former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko and her former cabinet members are either under arrest or threatened with criminal charges.

Under Kuchma, elections were falsified in 1999 and 2004 -- on both occasions with the assistance of Yanukovych at the local and national levels. Under Yanukovych, local elections were falsified last year.

Free elections can only be trusted to democratic forces such as Yushchenko, under whose watch high-quality elections were held in 2006, 2007, and 2010. Yanukovych is destroying the institution of free elections that brought him to power.

In the 2002, 2006-07, and 2010 parliaments, Kuchma and Yanukovych both sought to bribe, coerce, and blackmail opposition deputies to defect to the ruling coalition. Usually these were business leaders in the opposition, whether members of the Liberal Party in 2002 led by Volodymyr Shcherban or the Party of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs led by Anatoliy Kinakh in 2007.

The Communist Party (KPU) never entered government under Kuchma, but has joined both coalitions established by Yanukovych: the anticrisis coalition in 2006-07 and Stability and Reforms since 2010. The neo-Stalinist KPU is anti-reform and anti-Western, and therefore any coalition that includes such a political force cannot honestly be described as "reformist."

There has also been regression on national identity questions. The KPU and Yanukovych's Party of Regions voted against the 2006 law on the 1933 artificial famine (Holodomor) and the pages on the famine on the presidential website were removed on February 25, 2010, the day Yanukovych was inaugurated. In 2003, by contrast, Kuchma launched an international campaign to support the designation of the Holodomor as an act of genocide.

Collapse Of Independent Institutions

Parliament became a rubber-stamp institution under Yanukovych for the first time in its history, because Kuchma never had a stable majority. Yanukovych's Stability and Reforms coalition has bought in 50 opposition deputies, giving it more than 260 in total in the 450-seat Verkhovna Rada.

The courts are in far worse condition today than under Kuchma. Supreme Court Chief Justice Vasyl Onopenko told the "Kyiv Post" that "courts as judicial bodies and judges have lost their independence. This is a direct threat to the judicial protection of human rights."

After the summer 2010 reform of the judiciary. "the Supreme Court has been denied the ability to perform its constitutional function," Onopenko said. "No one guarantees the unity of case law and equal application of laws in state courts. The Supreme Court, which previously did it, is now deprived of such powers."

Yanukovych has marginalized the Supreme Court as personal revenge for its December 2004 annulling of his second-round election victory. In a February 11 interview with the BBC, Yanukovych again repeated that the Supreme Court had infringed the constitution in 2004 when it annulled his election and that he had won a "free election."

Under both Kuchma and Yanukovych, the unreformed "siloviki," or security forces -- the Security Service (SBU), the Interior Ministry (MVS), and the Tax Police -- have been used against the political opposition and independent media.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov led the Tax Police throughout its first seven years of existence (1996-2002). The SBU under Yanukovych has adopted authoritarian tactics against academics, NGO activists, politicians, and journalists for the first time since under its predecessor, the Soviet Ukrainian KGB, in the pre-Gorbachev era.

In the 1990s the MVS was more under democratic control than today, as its Internal Troops had been taken away in 1991 and transformed into a National Guard. But these were returned to the MVS in 2000 and have, like in other postcommunist systems, become the president's praetorian guard.

On November 28, 2004, the MVS troops were ordered to Kiev by Prime Minister Yanukovych, over Kuchma's head, to violently suppress the Orange Revolution. But they were turned back by the army.

Journalists Disappear

Under Kuchma the murder of journalist Heorhiy Gongadze became an international scandal after a tape recording was released in which the president allegedly ordered Interior Minister Yuriy Kravchenko to violently beat Gongadze.

What is less well known is that journalist Ihor Aleksandrov was also killed in 2001 in Donetsk when Yanukovych was governor of the region.

Last month, "The Washington Post" asked Yanukovych about Kharkiv editor Vasyl Klymentyev, who disappeared only seven months after Yanukovych was elected. The MVS assumes he has been killed.

Yanukovych nonchalantly replied, "Many journalists disappear all over the world."

Media censorship took place under Kuchma, but the situation is worse today. What differentiates the Kuchma and Yanukovych presidencies was that total censorship under the former was impossible because of the strength of the opposition, inside and outside parliament, and pluralism within the ruling elites.

Yanukovych claims that "mercenaries" in the West have been bought to write negatively about Ukraine and that the Czech government was bribed to grant former Economy Minister Bohdan Danylyshyn political asylum.

Yanukovych's worldview exports Ukraine's domestic situation -- where Ukrainian journalists are often paid to place articles and politicians and cabinet ministers are often corrupt -- to the outside world. This worldview does not see either the legitimacy of Western criticism or the legitimacy of domestic criticism by the opposition and media.

Yanukovych refuses to acknowledge that democratic regression is taking place on his watch and, in this, he is similar to Kuchma. But, in five areas -- political repression, parliamentary independence, media censorship, the use of the "siloviki," and quality of elections -- democratic regression is worse under Yanukovych than it was under Kuchma.

If it continues, it will lead to Ukraine becoming ranked as "not free" by the end of Yanukovych's first term in office, following Kyrgyzstan, which dropped after its 2005 Tulip Revolution from "partly free" to "not free" in 2010.

Viktor Yanukovych: Yulia Tymoshenko Should Be Allowed To Move With No Restrictions

KIEV, Ukraine -- Viktor Yanukovych believes that Yulia Tymoshenko should have an opportunity to go to Brussels. "If she has a desire to go, then she shouldn't be denied the right to move with no restrictions," said Ukrainian President to the journalists.
When asked by reporters about the situation with the criminal persecution of the former prime minister of Ukraine, and now an opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko, Ukraine's President Viktor Yanukovych expressed his concern about the decisions made by the Prosecutor General's Office that investigates allegations of misuse of state budget funds.

Viktor Yanukovych told journalists that he particularly voiced his concern during a recent meeting with an Attorney General.

"I am frustrated with the choice of the Prosecutor General with regards to his sanctions against Yulia Tymoshenko. The fight against corruption should be conducted regardless of political views and colors of the party flags. This investigation should be respectful of those people whose activities are being investigated and should impeccably follow the letter of the law," - said Victor Yanukovych.

The Ukrainian leader stressed that fighting corruption should be devoid of politics. He also mentioned that this case should not allow for the public to have an impression about the selective criminal persecution.

Victor Yanukovych said, that he had talked to some leaders of European institutions, who would be willing to see Tymoshenko in Brussels. "I believe she should have such an opportunity. If she has a desire to go, then she shouldn't be denied the right to move with no restrictions," highlighted the Ukrainian leader.

Suffice it to say, that the investigator at the Prosecutor General's Office did not grant the request of Yulia Tymoshenko to allow her to travel outside Ukraine based on sanctions against her - the recognizance not to leave.

Tymoshenko is accused of misappropriation of hundreds of millions of dollars received by Ukraine under the Kyoto Protocol, which should have been invested into environmental programs.

In addition, Yulia Tymoshenko is charged with embezzlement of state funds while procuring ambulances at inflated prices.

Earlier, an international audit of Tymoshenko's government has revealed numerous financial irregularities including failure to follow proper tender procedures while making state procurements.

Ukraine President Promises $4.4 billion For Euro 2012

KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on Thursday promised some $6.1 billion dollars in government and private funds would be spent on preparations for the Euro 2012 football championship by January.
Euro 2012 is not just a wonderful sports event, it is jobs and our GDP,' Yanukovych said, speaking at a meeting with government officials in the southern city Odessa.

The Ukrainian government has budgeted some $1.2 billion dollars towards preparation for the championship to be spent by the end of 2011, and private industry is likely to contribute another $3.2 billion dollars in investment credits over the same period, he said.

The money would go towards improving airports, roads, railroad, and developing hotel infrastructure, he said.

Opposition politicians have criticized the Yanukokych administration for allegedly spending too lavishly on getting ready for Euro 2012, and for planning to slash pensions and raise taxes to help pay to co-host the championship.

The UEFA in 2007 named Poland and Ukraine co-hosts for Euro 2012.

Ukraine's preparation effort thus far has been mixed with delays in stadium construction, transportation infrastructure overhaul, and hotel development the worst headaches.

Prime Minister Mykola Azarov, Yanukovych's top lieutenant, on Monday said work to get ready for Euro 2012 would be 'practically complete' by the end of 2011, according to an Interfax report.

Rasmussen Plans To Discuss Ukraine's Participation In NATO Missile Defense System

BRUSSELS, Belgium -- NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen has said that during his visit to Ukraine, he plans to discuss Ukraine's possible participation in the NATO missile defense system.
"What I would like to discuss during my visit to Ukraine is the question of Ukraine's possible contribution to the Euro-Atlantic architecture of a missile defense system," he told Ukrainian reporters in Brussels on Thursday.

He said that the decision to create such a system had been made relatively recently.

"We have not yet completed the final design of the architecture, [and] we are at the initial stage of this process. Only two or three months have passed after NATO decided to develop a system on the basis of NATO," he said.

Rasmussen recalled that Russia had been invited to cooperate in this project at the alliance's summit in Lisbon, Portugal.

"What we've done during the summit is initiate a joint analysis of Russia-NATO relations as to how we can realize this practical cooperation. If other Euro-Atlantic partners offer their participation and their potential to the architecture of the missile defense system, then, of course, we will take this into account. It is too early to give a definitive answer to how this architecture will develop, and this will depend on the contribution of Ukraine and other partners," he said.

As reported, Rasmussen said that he would pay a one-day visit to Ukraine on February 24.

Saturday 12 February 2011

Israel, Ukraine Cancel Visa Requirements

TEL AVIV, Israel -- Tourism Ministry says deal between two countries will increase number of Ukrainian visitors by 40%.
Israelis traveling to the Ukraine no longer need an entry visa, and Ukrainians do not need a visa to enter Israel, following an agreement signed between the two nations.

The Ministry of Tourism estimates that the development will raise the number of Ukrainians traveling to Israel by 40% compared to last year.

Up to 140,000 tourists are expected to come from the Eastern European coutry in 2011, contributing an estimated $100 million to the Israeli economy.

In 2010, 292,000 passengers boarded flights on the Israel-Ukraine line, a 24% increase compared with2009. Tens of thousands of Ukrainians also made day trips into Israel, crossing over the Egyptian border or taking charter flights from Antalya, Turkey.

The price of a visa to Ukraine was anywhere between NIS 150 ($41) and NIS 4,650 ($1,265), depending on the type.

Currently, 31 weekly flights transport passengers between the two nations, 16 of them operated by Aerosvit Airlines and six by El Al.

Arkia is expected to launch two additional weekly flights in the coming months.

Israelis in Ukraine

Kiev, which lies on the banks of the Dnieper River, is abundant in attractions such as churches, museums, parks and Jewish sites.

The ancient Kiev Monastery of the Caves is a major tourist attraction, as it the Lover's Bridge in Kreshchatik Park, the perfect setting for a marriage proposal.

Another popular site is Mariinsky Park, where statues and fountains are plentiful. On the outskirts of Kiev is Babi Yar, the ravine where tens of thousands of Jews were massacred by Nazis in 1941.

According to Aerosvit Israel General Manager Avi Schwartz, approximately 100,000 Israelis traveled to Ukraine last year.

Some 40,000 of them were Breslov followers, who went to Uman to visit Rebbe Nachman of Breslov's tomb, while others went to visit families, took vacations or made business trips.

"The cancelation of visas will multiply the number of tourists traveling from Israel to Ukraine," Schwartz said.

"The high price of visas deterred many people who wanted to visit Ukraine but did not want to pay hundreds of shekels for an entry visa."

Schwartz also mentioned that Ukraine is preparing to receive an increased number of visitors because it was chosen to host the Euro soccer championships in 2012.

He noted that that the competition between airlines is driving flight prices down.

Secret Agents At Their Worst

KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine stands to lose billions is arms sales to Iraq because of accusations that the first deliveries consisted of sub-standard equipment.
But it also appears that insufficient bribes were paid to "agents" who had considerable influence within the Iraqi Defense Ministry.

It also appears that sufficient bribes were not paid on the Ukrainian end either. Intense negotiations are underway.

Since the Cold War ended in 1991, Ukrainian arms manufacturers have been scrambling for orders.

Previous customers (Soviet Union and communist nations in Eastern Europe) had stopped buying.

Many Ukrainian weapons manufacturers did not survive the 1990s, and those who did, learned to do whatever it takes to make a sale.

Unless this mess, and the attendant corruption, can be cleared up, these Iraqi deals may collapse, while several hundred million dollars will disappear in the process.

Over the last three years, in deals brokered by the United States, Ukraine received orders from Iraq for $2.4 billion worth of weapons.

Most of these items were of Russian design, which many Iraqi military personnel are familiar with. Ukraine has, and still manufactures, lots of Russian designed weapons.

Ukraine split from the Soviet Union (and Russia) in 1991 when the Soviet Union was dissolved.

Many Soviet weapons plants were in Ukraine, as well as huge quantities of military equipment.

That's because Ukraine was the forward staging area for Soviet forces that were to invade Western Europe, or defend against NATO. Ukraine inherited whatever was on its territory when the dissolution took place.

Ukraine has kept some of those weapons plants going by becoming the low-cost provider of new Russian designed weapons (and now much of those have been updated by Ukrainian engineers.)

While friendly with the United States, Ukraine has also cultivated good relations with China, by quietly sending the Chinese examples of advanced Soviet weapons (including some that never went into mass production).

Ukraine wants to be on good terms with the U.S. and China because of the fear that Russian will try to make Ukraine, once more, part of Russia.

This first happened in the 17th century, and the Ukrainians never got used to it.

Actually, Ukraine had been dismembered before that by Poles, Lithuanians and Mongols.

Thus Ukraine is enjoying its first period of real independence in over 500 years.

They want to keep it that way, any way they can.

EU Official Predicts Free-Trade Deal With Ukraine By 2013

KIEV, Ukraine -- A senior European Union official on Thursday predicted a free-trade deal with Ukraine could be concluded by 2013, the Interfax news agency reported.
I am absolutely sure that we can sign this agreement by the end of the year,' said Philippe Cuisson, who heads a European Commission delegation in Ukraine for talks on the free-trade zone.

Such an agreement would go into effect beginning in 2013, with duty barriers to be completedly eliminated by 2019, he said.

'Ukraine will be fully integrated with the European economy in 10 years, like Switzerland or Norway,' he said.

Ukraine's government has identified economic integration with the EU as one of its top priorities, seeing it as means to expanding exports and attracting foreign investment.

The EU is a major consumer of Ukraine's top export products, particularly metals and agricultural goods.

Ukraine's biggest imports from the EU are machinery, transport equipment, chemicals and textile products.

Behind The Mystery Of Kiev's Missing Mayor

KIEV, Ukraine -- Some said he was holidaying in Georgia, others said that he had asked for political asylum in Israel — then there were those who joked cruelly that he had gone back to outer space.Kiev Mayor Leonid Chernovetsky — known as "Cosmos" for his eccentric behavior — had not been seen in public since last fall, and his extended absence had set off a flurry of rumors about where he was and why he'd disappeared.

But when he finally appeared on TV Wednesday evening, he didn't explain why he'd been away. Instead, he went on the attack, saying the government was trying to discredit him and that his allies in Kiev were being "persecuted" by corruption investigations.

"I really was in Georgia," Chernovetsky said during a 45-minute interview on Channel 5. He noted that he'd carried on fulfilling his duties from abroad. "They brought me documents to sign," he said, appearing to confirm earlier local press reports that papers were being flown out for his signature.

Political analysts have their own theories about his temporary disappearance, and all are connected to attempts by Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych's government to consolidate power in the country by sidelining officials not allied to the ruling party and launching investigations against former officials from the previous government, a move criticized by both U.S. and European Union officials.

Chernovetsky, a multimillionaire former banker, isn't in the opposition, and he supported Yanukovych during his 2010 presidential campaign. But the government has made it clear it wants him out of the way.

In recent months, the mayor has had his power eroded by the national authorities amid mounting accusations of corruption over land sales and mismanagement of city affairs.

Kievans, inclined to agree that he's been a poor leader who hasn't solved the city's massive infrastructure problems, have not put up much of a fight to keep him.

Some political analysts suggest that his disappearance was part of a deal he had struck with the government in return for not facing charges.

Others say he left to avoid getting caught up in the investigations into other top city officials, who are accused of selling land at knock-down prices. Chernovetsky and his allies deny all allegations of corruption.

Whatever the reason for Chernovetsky's absence from the public eye, it was unusual. The mayor is not shy about appearing before the people. He has used press conferences to demonstrate his (awful) singing voice, and once stripped down to his swimming trunks to prove to reporters that he was physically and psychologically fit for office after some officials had questioned his mental stability.

But following Yanukovych's election last February, the new government has shown little patience for the mayor's antics. A presidential ally, Oleksandr Popov, was appointed as Chernovetsky's deputy and appeared to take over the running of the city.

In November, a parliamentary decision separated the job of head of city administration from the role of the mayor; Popov was appointed head of administration, leaving Chernovetsky in a mainly ceremonial role — or, as Prime Minister Mykola Azarov remarked snidely, "like the Queen of England."

Chernovetsky was elected Kiev mayor in 2006, ousting an unpopular incumbent, as opponents accused him of bribing poor, elderly voters with food parcels during the campaign. He quickly lost public support amid claims of incompetent management and insider sales of land and municipal companies.

Chernovetsky has always denied involvement in any illegal deals; still, a 2010 survey found that 89% of Kievans thought he was performing badly as mayor. Last winter, the mayor's inability to deal with the havoc caused by the snow piling up on Kiev's streets prompted the Prime Minister to issue an ultimatum. "Stop messing around," Azarov recalled saying to Chernovetsky. "Grab a spade ... and clear away the snow, or we'll clear you away."

In Wednesday's interview, the mayor said he had no intention of quitting, adding that he is upset at how newspapers and government officials have "poured dirt" on him "in order to make me look like a bad leader."

He claimed that the corruption accusations against him are a political move to keep him under pressure. "There's not one politician in the country ... who wouldn't be afraid of or expect some kind of political persecution," Chernovetsky said.

But that explanation seems unlikely to gain him much sympathy among disgruntled Kievans. "I'm glad he's back in Kiev as he deserves to sit in jail, not on holiday abroad," says Kiev resident Olena Popova.

Goodbye Lenin As Ukraine Statue In Vanishing Act

KIEV, Ukraine -- A statue of Lenin that still stands proudly in one of the host cities for the Euro 2012 football championships in Ukraine has mysteriously disappeared from the main promotional advertisement for the event.
The snazzy 90 second video -- entitled "Switch on Ukraine" -- shows cities and landscapes extolling the beauty of the ex-Soviet state, which is to host the football extravaganza along with Poland.

Among the sites shown in the video -- aired on a host of international channels -- is Liberty Square in the handsome northeastern Ukrainian city of Kharkiv which is to host matches along with three other cities.

But the video shows only an empty base where in reality a 8.5 metre high statue of Communist leader Lenin built in 1963 still proudly stands to this day in Liberty Square.

"Kharkiv is being shown to Europe without Lenin," said the newspaper Segodnia.

Ukraine's advisor for preparations for Euro 2012, Olexander Goncharenko, told AFP that the video had been "touched up" to "remove all images of a commercial and political nature".

"All the pictures shot in town have been touched up. I do not think that the monument to Lenin is a particularly important part of the Kharkiv landscape," he added.

Lenin's disappearance has already sparked a lively debate in Ukraine, divided between the nationalist west and the more Russia-leaning east which remembers the Communist past much more fondly.

Lenin statues are still common in the east but largely absent from the west of the country.

"We are ashamed to shown Lenin to Europe but we are not ashamed to show him to Ukrainians," said one blogger, marusia911.

Ukraine's promotion for Euro 2012 has already hit controversy when President Viktor Yanukovych suggested that foreigners should visit the country in spring to enjoy the sight of scantily-clad women.

The country faces an uphill struggle to be ready in time for the tournament amid controversy over political interference in football and delays in building infrastructure.

Thursday 3 February 2011

Troy Man To Be Deported For Helping Nazis Kill Jews

DETROIT, USA -- An immigration judge today ordered the deportation of a man accused of collaborating with the Nazis during World War II.
U.S. Immigration Judge Elizabeth Hacker, sitting in Detroit, ordered John Kalymon removed to Germany, Ukraine, Poland or any country that will take him, the Executive Office for Immigration Review said. Details of Hacker’s decision weren’t available.

Kalymon’s lawyer, Elias Xenos of Birmingham, said he hadn’t seen the ruling and couldn’t comment in any detail, but said he likely will appeal. There was no immediate comment from the Justice Department.

Kalymon, 89, of Troy, a former Chrysler factory worker, was stripped of his U.S. citizenship in 2007 for shooting Jews and killing at least one in the 1940s during round-ups in what is now L’viv, Ukraine. He served in the Ukrainian Auxiliary Police, but denies he ever took part in such activities.

He was the last Nazi-era defendant prosecuted by the Justice Department.

Last fall, Hacker declined Xenos’ request to hold a mental competency hearing for Kalymon, who suffers from dementia and prostate cancer.

Kalymon is under no immediate threat of removal because his case could be appealed for several years.

And it’s unclear whether any country would accept him. The Ukraine and Poland haven’t accepted any Nazi-era deportations in several years, and Germany has accepted them only rarely.

Ukraine Evacuates Diplomats, Government Workers From Egypt

CAIRO, Egypt -- Ukraine evacuated 127 diplomats, their family members and other personnel from Egypt on Tuesday, a government spokesman said.
A charter plane hired by the Ukrainian government left Cairo airport Tuesday morning without incident, Foreign Ministry spokesman Oleksander Dikusarov told the Interfax news agency.

Employees of Ukraine's national energy company Naftohaz Ukrainy and the state weapons export company Ukrspetsexport were also aboard, Dikusarov said.

The flight was scheduled to land in Kiev Tuesday afternoon.

Ukraine's government on Friday suggested travel agencies stop selling tour packages to Egypt because of street demonstrations in the capital Cairo.

Media reports suggest the advisory has so far had only a moderate effect on Ukraine's tourist industry.

'We have cancelled a few flights to Sharm el-Sheikh and Hurghada, but we are still conducting flights to Egypt,' Kiev-based charter operator Windrose told Interfax.

Some 6,500 Ukrainian nationals are currently in Egypt, according to Foreign Ministry estimates.

Ukraine's President Says Not Meddling In Soccer Body

KIEV, Ukraine -- Ukraine's president denied political interference in his country's soccer federation (FFU) in an interview published on Wednesday, brushing aside charges that threaten Kiev's right to co-host Euro 2012 with Poland.
Last week, European soccer's governing body UEFA said Ukraine could be suspended from international football and thus lose the right to stage the European championship if it does not act quickly to stop political interference.

"I assure you that the state authorities are not mounting political pressure on the FFU," President Viktor Yanukovich told Polish media in an interview ahead of his planned visit to Warsaw on Thursday.

"In the past year, we have caught up on delays in preparations for the championship and I do not want Ukraine to be deprived of the right to organise Euro 2012," Yanukovich said.

"We can resolve the conflict in the FFU by postponing discussions on its internal problems until next year," he added.

Last Friday, UEFA gave Ukraine a week to resolve the situation after receiving documents showing that some state and regional authorities were putting pressure on delegates.

The soccer scene in Ukraine reflects competing interests among major oligarchs and Ukrainian media said key figures in the political establishment, including Euro 2012 minister Borys Kolesnikov, wanted FFU head Hrigory Surkis out.

Surkis's opponents have said they will continue to seek his dismissal despite the warnings from UEFA and world soccer's governing body FIFA.

Tymoshenko Says Government Was Afraid Of Her Returning From Brussels

KIEV, Ukraine -- Batkivschyna Party leader Yulia Tymoshenko has said that the fact that an investigator from the Prosecutor General's Office banned her from travelling to Brussels indicates that the authorities were afraid of her returning from Belgium.
"They are depriving me of my right to travel outside Ukraine in order to establish communication with the European Union, other democratic countries in the world, and save Ukraine in the current difficult situation," she told journalists on Wednesday before her interrogation at the prosecutor's office.

Tymoshenko said that the Prosecutor General's Office and the authorities in general "were afraid of me returning, rather than not returning."

When asked whether diplomats in Brussels still expect her to visit, Tymoshenko said: "Of course, they are waiting for me at any moment and want to see me. There are a lot of problems that currently have to be discussed so that Ukraine stays on its path to the European Union."

However, she declined to specify whether she would file more petitions in order to leave for Brussels. Tymoshenko noted that she would ask for advice on her further actions in this regard.

Ukraine To Curb Rising Food Prices

KIEV, Ukraine -- According to the Food and Agriculture Organization at the UN the world economy faces a food price shock, which can lead to food crisis.
he FAO report predicts that food prices will jump 11% for the world's poorest nations and 20% for low-income food-deficit countries.

Already, the UN estimates that 1 billion people in the world suffer from hunger, the highest number in history. The majority of Ukrainian families spend 60% of their income on utilities and food.

World market prices for grains and oil seeds have risen dramatically over the last two years. Ukraine's inflation rate stands at 16.1 percent and the cost of staple items like bread, eggs, meat, buckwheat and vegetables also increased by 20 to 70 percent.

Experts say rising food prices create a difficult macroeconomic and social policy challenge. Ukraine, which is known as the breadbasket of Europe, could be one of the first countries in Europe to face the global food crisis.

Experts argue that the country with huge agricultural potential has no appropriate agricultural policy framework.

Ukrainian officials say the Government has a policy to hold the price down. The Government also has established a program for the 'Agroindustrial Complex and Development of Rural Areas' that, if implemented, would make a significant contribution to increasing competitiveness.

However, the opposition has urged the authority to draft a concrete action plan to protect the country from food shortages and rocketing food prices.

Experts say Ukraine is able to deal with the food crisis, providing investment and employment opportunities in the agriculture sector; however, it is possible after the country becomes free from the speculative capital movements.

Meanwhile ordinary salesmen refuse to comment on the food items prices.

The world food crisis equally poses challenges and presents opportunities for Ukraine.

Experts, however, say that without an appropriate macroeconomic policy, targeted social support, Ukraine, which is one of the most powerful agrarian countries, can be badly hit by the crisis.