Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine backs tough TV language rules to limit Russian – EURACTIV

Ukraines parliament ratched up its cultural war against Russia yesterday (22 May) by backing television language quotas requiring major channels to broadcast at least three-quarters of their programmes in Ukrainian.

The measure was passed a week after Ukraine blocked Russias most popular social media networks and a top internet search engine in a self-proclaimed effort to prevent Kremlin propaganda from reaching the crisis-torn former Soviet state.

Ukraines Verkhovna Rada parliament passed the TV quotas bill by an overwhelming 269-15 margin.

Once again, the Verkhovna Rada has demonstrated that it is a Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada, one eliminating the remnants of the Soviet imperialist past, parliament speaker Andriy Parubiy said after the vote.

Most people in Ukraine speak both languages but Russian is used more often in the east while Ukrainian is preferred in the west.

Ukraine came under intense criticism from free speech advocates and domestic users for prohibiting the Russian equivalent of Facebook and other popular internet services and sites.

But nationalists and senior politicians saw it as a proper response to an information campaign that Russia is waging alongside the ground offensive it is backing in Ukraines separatist east.

The three-year conflict has killed more than 10,000 people and turned Moscow and Kyiv into sworn foes.

Kyiv has been gradually expanding its list of outlawed Russian goods and Russians barred from entering the country for either voicing support for the Kremlins March 2014 annexation of Crimea or the self-proclaimed independence of Ukraines separatist fiefdoms.

Numerous Russian television series and movies have already been thrown off the airwaves and banned at cinemas. Ukraine has also blocked the import and sale of some books.

Ukraines free speech and information policy committee chief Viktoriya Syumar said the bill she co-wrote was in complete agreement with existing European standards.

Such laws exist in a number of European countries, she told lawmakers.

Totalitarianism only existed when Ukrainian was banned from use in our land, she added in reference to the Soviet practice of forcing other republics to speak Russian.

This law will work for Ukraine, for Ukrainian culture and for Ukrainian performers, actors, directors and everyone who respects their country, she said.

The bill makes an allowance for local channels to only show half of their broadcasts in Ukrainian.

President Petro Poroshenko is expected to sign the measure because his parliamentary faction backed the bill.

The legislation is also expected to prompt an angry response from Russia.

Moscow has long accused Ukraine of persecuting its Russian speakers.

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Ukraine backs tough TV language rules to limit Russian - EURACTIV

DTZ Ukraine Confirmed as Cushman & Wakefield’s Exclusive Affiliate in Ukraine – The FINANCIAL

The FINANCIAL -- Cushman & Wakefield has signed an exclusive arrangement with DTZ Ukraine as its affiliate in Ukraine. DTZ Ukraine has rebranded as Cushman & Wakefield.

DTZ Ukraine has operated in the market since 1994 offering clients a full range of real estate services including

Office agency and consultancy

Office occupier services

Logistics and industrial agency and consultancy

Retail agency and consultancy

Valuations

Capital markets

Research and development consultancy

Property and facility management

Since 2014 Ukraine has suffered overall economic decline and political uncertainty which has led to some investors and developers putting their activity on hold. Via this affiliation, Cushman & Wakefield has underlined its commitment to the Ukrainian demonstrating the improving perception of the market by international investors and corporate occupiers, according toCushman & Wakefield.

Nick Cotton, Managing Director of Cushman & Wakefield in Ukraine, said: Ukraine has significant natural, industrial and human resources and is back on the global investment map. It offers an alternative to more mature markets, providing an acceptable balance between the risks and returns of investing in business processes and real estate."

Our affiliation with Cushman & Wakefield has extended our client base and the services that we offer. As a result, we are growing our existing team and are actively recruiting as we seek to serve this wider client base. We remain dedicated to our core values established over 23 years - of integrity, being committed to cutting-edge ideas and client orientated service excellence.

Jonathan Hallett, Head of Central & Eastern Europe, Cushman & Wakefield said: Cushman & Wakefield has a very strong presence across CEE and we are delighted to have confirmed our affiliate relationship with DTZ Ukraine. Together with similar affiliations we have announced in recent months in Romania, Bulgaria and Macedonia, we are demonstrating our commitment to delivering outstanding client service and pursuing further growth throughout the CEE region.

John Forrester, Chief Executive EMEA, Cushman & Wakefield, said: Our strong and long lasting relationships with affiliates across EMEA extends delivery into markets where Cushman & Wakefield does not currently have a wholly-owned presence. This benefits both local and global clients who gain access to our global network and local knowledge respectively.

Cushman & Wakefield is a top three global real estate services firm, with some 45,000 employees in more than 70 countries, recorded revenue of over $5 billion,4.3 billion sq. ft. under management and $191 billion in global transactions.

Cushman & Wakefield has previously announced exclusive affiliate arrangements with:

Excellerate Property Services in sub-Saharan Africa, named Cushman & Wakefield Excellerate (August 2016).

DTZ Sherry FitzGerald in Ireland, rebranded to Cushman & Wakefield (August 2016).

Inter Israel in Israel, branded as Cushman & Wakefield Inter Israel (October 2016).

Proprius in Greece, branded as Cushman & Wakefield Proprius (October 2016).

SPG Intercity in Switzerland (December 2016).

Veritas Brown, rebranding as Cushman & Wakefield, in Kazakhstan and Georgia (December 2016).

DTZ Finland Oy, rebranding as Cushman & Wakefield, in Finland (January 2017).

DTZ Realkapital, rebranding as Cushman & Wakefield Realkapital, in Norway (February 2017)

DTZ Echinox, rebranding as Cushman & Wakefield Echinox, in Romania (March 2017)

Forton, rebranding as Cushman & Wakefield Forton, in Bulgaria and Macedonia (April 2017)

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DTZ Ukraine Confirmed as Cushman & Wakefield's Exclusive Affiliate in Ukraine - The FINANCIAL

Dutch senators poised to back EU’s treaty with Ukraine in key vote – DutchNews.nl

The senate, where the key vote will take place later on Tuesday

The Dutch senate is set to vote in favour of the controversial EU treaty with Ukraine on Tuesday thanks to the support of the CDA, the Volkskrant said.

Christian Democrat senators have a positive attitude, Elco Brinkman, the partys leader in the senate, told the paper. CDA MPs voted against the treaty when it was voted through by the lower house in February but the support of CDA senators is seen as crucial to have the treaty approved.

Over 60% of Dutch voters who took part in last years referendum on the treaty voted against it. Even though the referendum was advisory, most MPs said the decision had to be respected.

However, in December, prime minister Mark Rutte won the support of the 27 other European leaders for a supplementary declaration to the Ukraine treaty which makes it clear what the agreement actually entails.

Rutte has said that if the Netherlands fails to ratify the treaty, it could have serious implications for the stability of Europe.

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Dutch senators poised to back EU's treaty with Ukraine in key vote - DutchNews.nl

Ukraine seeks to avoid being a bargaining chip between Washington and Moscow – CBC.ca

As former law professor, Oksana Syroyid is used to educating people.

She has found that to be a useful skill these days.

As deputy Speaker of Ukraine's parliament, Syroyid took to educating Canadian and U.S. lawmakers during a recent visit, walking them through the labyrinth of politics in her country and Eastern Europe.

As with any tutoring, there needed to be a healthy dose of repetition and connecting the dotssomething Syroyid believes is critical as Ukraine tries to avoid becoming a bargaining chip between Washington and Moscow.

During a recent appearance at the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, Syroyid appealed to Canadian politicians to help her educate the new U.S. administration about the geopolitical significance of her country.

In Washingtonshe found,much like her Canadian counterparts,an official vacuum with many key positions still unfilledand ill-defined policy that has been punctuated by contradictory campaign speeches and errant Donald Trump tweets.

"We have the same challenge," Liberal MP John McKay told her.

"Thank God we are not alone," she said.

It might be said, with looming trade disputesover softwood lumber and aerospace subsidies,thatCanadians are having the same trouble educating Americans.

For the Canada-U.S. relationship, the stakes are enormous, particularly on the economic scale, but arguably they are not existential.

The stakes are far higher in Ukraine, with its eastern districts in the midst of a Russian-backed insurgency.

Syroyid chuckled when asked about having to repeat the same message all over the world.

"We do it in different capitals," she told CBC News. "We do it in Paris. We do it in Berlin. We do it Brussels. Anywhere we can reach, we do the same talk."

There is, however, a growing sense of gravity to the discussion as witnessed last week when former Ukrainian prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk also made the rounds in Ottawa.

Former Ukrainian prime minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk says he is somewhat reassured Ukraine is still on the U.S. administration's radar. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

He sees a renewed opportunitywith the election of the Trump administration to obtain modern military equipment for his country. Following a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Yatsenyuksays he is somewhat reassured Ukraine is still on the administration'sradar.

Aside from Washington's jumbled foreign policy, there are some places in Europe where there is pressure for trade-offs because the Ukrainian crisis is measured in dollars and cents.

"People want to do business with Russia," Syroyid said.

But recent events in eastern Ukraine, largely ignored in the West, may prove meaningful in the conflict, which occasionally seems to unfold in slow motion.

Ukraine's national energy company cut off electricity to separatist-occupied regions of Donbass on April 25, and within an hour the lights were back on.

Russia's power grid is now supplying the energy, at what local media estimates is a cost of $53 million US ayear.

This is where it gets complicated and downright opaque.

The move would appear, on the surface, to be another step towards secession in the contested region.

The Ukrainian utility, which was until 2014 a state-run enterprise, apparently counts a Russian oligarch among its biggest investors, she said.

The company, according to Syroyid, has not explained its decision other than to say it was no longer willing to underwrite the millions of dollars in unpaid bills from the breakaway regions.

"It's a game. It's a play," she said.

Russian ownership of key Ukrainian businesses is a matter of burgeoning political concern.

Syroyid describes it as the fourth wave in Russia's ongoing attempt to "colonize" her country.

The first wave was direct military intervention to annex Crimea.

The second wave was the backing of separatists in economically depressed eastern regions.

The third wave was what she describes as "political colonization" through an attempt to have Ukraine's constitution rewritten under the Minsk agreements.

Those separate accords were an attempt by the international community to stop the fighting in the breakaway regions regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.

Members of the separatist, self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic army collect parts of a destroyed Ukrainian army tank in the town of Vuhlehirsk. (Baz Ratner/Reuters)

But Syroyid says the political intention was "actually to colonize Ukraine back to Russia without any further shooting."

That is not the view of France, Germany, Belarus, Russia and even her own government, which signed on to the accord.

But her comments represent a further hardening of political resolve within Ukraine.

"The people of Ukraine didn't want it," she said. "They realized it was just a trick and any treaties with Russia make no sense."

The economic investment pro-Russian forces have made in her country, the so-called "controlled enterprises on the uncontrolled territory of Ukraine", represent the latest and perhaps greatest threat, she says.

They are legitimate businesses that pay taxes, but take their marching orders from Moscow, according to Syroyid.

Ukrainian army veterans and political activists who've fought in the stalemated eastern war have been applying political pressure on the government of President Petro Poroshenko to cut trade ties with the breakaway region.

Despite the trenches and daily shelling, shipments of coal, steel and other commodities still travel between the breakaway regions and Ukraine.

Syroyid says the message from soldiers, some who have blockaded railway lines, has been,"Stop the support of those who are killing us."

It is an elaborate set of circumstances that the Ukrainians believe bears repeating, particularly in Washington.

"We are ready to explain as long as somebody is willing to listen to us," Syroyid said.

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Ukraine seeks to avoid being a bargaining chip between Washington and Moscow - CBC.ca

Another View: Russia’s aims still drive friction as attention to Ukraine … – Press Herald

Ukraine has receded from world attention since its peak in 2014, when it changed presidents, Russia annexed Crimea and fighting was active in its east. The world reacted, for the large part, with words rather than actions.

Independent since 1991 in the wake of the Soviet Unions dissolution, Ukraine, Europes second-largest country, with a population of 45 million, is in the center of a tough region, with borders on Belarus, Hungary, Moldova, Poland, Romania, Russia and Slovakia. None of these seven countries is particularly prosperous. Russia is far and away Ukraines most important trading partner, taking 18 percent of its exports and providing 22 percent of its imports.

Russias annexation of Crimea, and its continued military involvement in Ukraines rebellious east, is the current cause of tension, intermittent fighting and complex relations between the two. It bears noting that Crimea was part of Russia until 1954 and that 60 percent of the population of Crimea is Russian speaking.

Russia and President Vladimir Putin, seeking to bolster his popular political support through successful aggression in Ukraine, are very much the villains of the piece in the trouble in eastern Ukraine, the annexation of Crimea and Western European and American reaction, including economic sanctions against Russia.

Seeking to make lemonade from the lemon of current relations, the Russians and the Trump administration could serve as the vehicle through which the Ukraine problem, as a regional issue, could be cleaned up. The U.S. could stop pushing to incorporate Ukraine into Western Europe through NATO and the European Union, Russia could withdraw its military support for the eastern Ukrainian rebels, and Crimea could become some sort of internationally observed territory as a step toward restoring it to Ukraine.

Putin and Trump need to meet soon, in any case. Ukraine has to be on the agenda.

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Another View: Russia's aims still drive friction as attention to Ukraine ... - Press Herald