Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ryanair launches first flights to Ukraine – Irish Independent

Four new Kiev routes will operate to/from London Stansted, Manchester, Stockholm and Eindhoven, the airline said today.

Seven services to Lviv will fly to/from Berlin, Budapest, Eindhoven, Krakow, London Stansted, Munich Memmingen and Wroclaw.

Services will commence in October on winter schedules.

In total, the announcement brings 31 weekly Ryanair flights to Ukraine, an investment it says will deliver 510,000 customers a year.

Flights from London Stansted to Kiev are five times weekly, with three flights a week from Manchester and Eindhoven, and four from Stockholm Skavsta.

Ryanair is pleased to announce that low fares have arrived in Ukraine, our 34th country of operation," said Chief Commercial Officer David O'Brien.

The arrival of Ryanair in Ukraine is without exaggeration, a remarkable event for Ukraine," said the country's Minister of Infrastructure, Volodymyr Omelyan.

"Negotiations lasted for several years," he added.

Sale fares are currently available from 19.99 each-way on ryanair.com, in a promotion running until midnight Thursday (March 16).

NB: This article has been updated.

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Ryanair launches first flights to Ukraine - Irish Independent

Ukraine may arrest Russia’s wheelchair-confined Eurovision singer Yulia Samoylova – The Sydney Morning Herald

Moscow: The Eurovision Song Contest has long been clouded by nationalistic feuds.

A particularly chauvinistic drumbeat is crescendoing around this year's festival in Kiev: Ukraine said on Monday that it may bar Russia's contestant from entering, on the grounds that she illegally toured Crimea after Moscow annexed the peninsula in 2014. Or it may arrest her.

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Eurovision 2016 brought the usual glitz and cheese, but for one fan of Australia's Dami Im it was clearly all too much....

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US Department of Justice has charged two Russian intelligence officers and two hackers over a mega data breach at Yahoo that affected hundreds of millions of user accounts.

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Leaders of the House of Representatives Intelligence Committee say they do not believe Trump Tower was tapped during the 2016 presidential campaign.

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A new exhibition in London explores the bold and revolutionary vision that Soviet designers and architects had for their new civilisation.

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Being cut from fishing nets, a sperm whale waits to be escorted to deep waters off the coast of China.

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In the days since their children crashed a live BBC interview, Professor Robert Kelly and his wife Jung-A Kim say they have had to switch their phones off and avoid social media.

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Thousands of rifles and machine guns destined for criminal and terrorist groups in Europe have been seized in Spain.

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MSNBC has received President Donald Trump's two page 2005 tax return.

Eurovision 2016 brought the usual glitz and cheese, but for one fan of Australia's Dami Im it was clearly all too much....

That this year's instalment would be as politically charged as ever was clear the moment Ukraine's contestant, Jamala, took home the prize in 2016, which gave Kiev the right to host. An ethnic Crimean Tatar, she veered from rules banning political lyrics by alluding to the mass deportation of her people by Joseph Stalin, and hinted at mistreatment under Moscow's current rule.

Some Russian MPs and glitterati have called for a boycott, but instead, Russia has announced that it will send 27-year-old Yulia Samoylova to perform, immediately stirring a new refrain of controversy in Russia and Ukraine.

Samoylova, who has used a wheelchair since childhood, will perform "Flame is Burning", which has an upbeat message more in the spirit of Eurovision's historical mission than "1944", Jamala's 2016 winner.

But politics may prevent Samoylova from being in Kiev when Eurovision kicks off in May.

She performed in Crimea in 2015 and Ukrainian law gives authorities to the right to bar entry to the country for anyone who has been to the peninsula without crossing the de facto land border and going through Ukrainian border control and customs. Visitors from Russia, who can fly from Moscow to Crimea, rarely go through the trouble.

Olena Gitlyanska, press secretary of Ukraine's security service, said on her Facebook page that the agency will decide "based exclusively on the norms of Ukrainian legislation and interests of national security" whether Samoylova should be allowed in.

Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine's interior minister and a legislator in the national parliament, suggested on Facebook that Samoylova be allowed to perform in the competition but also serve time for breaking the law.

"We are not denying the Russian contestant entry to Ukraine, but also will demonstrate in public from her example that we aren't going to tolerate the violation of the Ukrainian border," he said.

The Russian singer could face up to three years in prison "for breaching the order of entering the temporary occupied territories of Ukraine and leaving them for the purpose of infringing the interest of the state".

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman shot back, telling reporters "practically everyone has been to Crimea" and that it was "absolutely unacceptable" for Ukraine to politicise the contest.

Eurovision has seen political scores settled before. A year after it fought a brief war with Russia, Georgia pulled out of the 2009 competition - held in Moscow thanks to Dima Bilan's winning entry in Eurovision 2008 - after organisers banned Georgia's entry because it contained a reference to Putin.

Some Ukraine supporters protested that Russia, which is supporting separatist rebels in the east of the country, should not be allowed to enter a contestant this year.

"Russia doesn't have the moral right to take part in the Eurovision contest while Russian shells are destroying our cities," commented Twitter user Vlad Velichko.

And nothing happens in Russia without an accompanying conspiracy theory. Commentators in Moscow were quick to cast the choice of Samoylova - who was the runner-up in 2013 on Russia's Factor A televised music contest and sang at the opening of the 2014 Paralympic Games in Sochi - as a cynical Kremlin ploy to generate sympathy.

"They are knowingly sending a young woman with a disability so that they can later report on the 'inhumane Ukrainians' who boo the Russian artist (if any of that happens)," television producer Sergey Kalvarskiy wrote on Facebook.

"For a country where people with disabilities unfortunately are treated as inferior, such a choice is unexpected," wrote Vladimir Varfolomeyev, a reporter for Ekho Moskvy radio station. "It could be a sign of changes in the state policy toward people with disabilities but that's hard to believe. Most probably Moscow wants to avoid any possible problems for its representative in Kiev (nobody will want to boo a disabled singer) or even hopes to win the contest by stirring up sympathy."

It's still rare, in fact, to see a person out in public in a wheelchair in Russia or Ukraine. Getting around is a formidable challenge. Legions of apartment houses have elevator doors that are too narrow to accommodate a wheelchair.

And then there was Josef Kobzon, a Russian crooner-turned-nationalist MP, who struck a bellicose sour note, saying that Samoylova should not go to Kiev because it would make the country look weak for people to see "Russia in a wheelchair".

"Why should we appeal to pity to those who hate our country," Russian news agencies quoted Kobzon as saying.

Washington Post

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Ukraine may arrest Russia's wheelchair-confined Eurovision singer Yulia Samoylova - The Sydney Morning Herald

Disappearing books: How Russia is shuttering its Ukrainian library – Reuters

MOSCOW First, armed police seized some of its books. Next, its director was put on trial accused of stirring up ethnic hatred. And now, quietly, its shelves have been emptied and its volumes packed up, ready to be merged into another library's collection.

A year and a half after Russia's only state-run Ukrainian language library, Moscow's Library of Ukrainian Literature, was dragged into a political dispute between the two countries, Reuters has learnt that authorities are quietly winding it down.

Officially, what is happening to the library -- its 52,000 books are being transferred to Russia's main foreign language library -- is "a change of address" not a closure.

But the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry, some of the library's employees, and members of Russia's large Ukrainian diaspora say it is a closure in all but name.

Tatyana Muntyan, a library employee, said that even before the transfer its director had reduced opening hours, stopped home lending, halted acquisitions, and made readers show passports to gain entry. The library's director declined to comment.

The saga, along with other measures, suggests political differences between Moscow and Kiev are driving a wedge between two peoples whose cultures have been interwoven for centuries. It is likely to stoke Ukrainian fears that their culture, as well as their territorial integrity, is under siege.

Moscow annexed Ukraine's Crimea region in 2014 and Kiev accuses it of backing pro-Russian separatists in eastern Ukraine, an allegation the Kremlin denies.

Russian officials have often cast doubt on Ukraine's status as a separate country, recalling much of it was once part of the Russian empire. Some Ukrainians say the library's fate is another example of their nationhood being undermined by Russia.

"They want to prove that we are 'one people,'" wrote Vitaly Portnikov, a Ukrainian commentator for Radio Free Europe. "To do that, you need to destroy everything that constitutes the cultural uniqueness of the Ukrainian people. In such a situation why have a Ukrainian library in the center of Moscow?"

DAWN RAID, ARREST

Estimates of the number of Ukrainians in Russia range from five to ten million, making them Russia's third-largest ethnic group. Since Moscow annexed Crimea, some Ukrainians say they feel insecure in Russia.

A Ukrainian film director, Oleg Sentsov, is serving 20 years in jail for "terrorist attacks" in Crimea after what Amnesty International called "a show trial." Diplomatic ties between the two are, as one Ukrainian official put it, "almost zero".

Ukraine warned its citizens in October against traveling to Russia, saying they were at risk following an increase in harassment and detentions by Russia's security services.

The Ukrainian library's problems got serious in October 2015 when armed, masked police carried out a pre-dawn raid and arrested Natalya Sharina, then its director, confiscating books the authorities called illegal anti-Russian propaganda.

One of the books, by Dmytro Korchinskiy, a Ukrainian nationalist author banned in Russia, was on a list of "extremist" literature. Library employees said at the time that investigators had planted extremist books to frame them.

Investigators have declined to respond to that allegation.

Sharina, 59, who denies wrongdoing, has been under house arrest since then, and is on trial in a Moscow court accused of inciting ethnic hatred by distributing literature one Russian expert certified as anti-Russian. Her successor has accused her of misappropriating funds too. Sharina denies that.

Her legal team says the case against her is politically-motivated. Designated a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International, she faces up to 10 years in jail if found guilty.

Other library staff say they have been cross-examined in the wider investigation, with some having their homes searched.

There has so far been no official announcement of the library's closure, but Moscow city officials said in December they planned to give its collection to a new center of Slavonic culture that will house books from 13 countries.

The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry urged Russia not to go ahead, saying the library should be spared the "deliberate destruction of the only specialized state institution founded by the Ukrainian community".

It had raised the issue with the Russian government, which had ignored the pleas.

EMPTY SHELVES

A Reuters reporter who visited the library, a sprawling green building, saw empty shelves, piles of boxes packed with books, and no readers.

On the web site of the Moscow city government, which owns the library, its designation has been quietly changed. Once listed as a library, it is now in an amorphous "other" category.

Employees say they tell readers there are no longer any books to read, they no longer offer Ukrainian language lessons, and that the library's contents are being transferred to the new center elsewhere in Moscow.

A spokeswoman for the Moscow city authorities said the most popular books were already available in their new home. Others would be transferred later. More readers went to the new library than frequented the Ukrainian library, she said.

The Ukrainian library traces its history back to 1918 and has, in various incarnations, weathered a Stalin-era clamp down on Ukrainian literature and World War Two.

The new cultural center does not appear to have the space to display the Ukrainian library's 52,000 books and periodicals. It said in December it would only be able to hold 12,000 books.

The library's current director, Natalya Vidineeva, who was brought in after her predecessor's arrest, told Reuters via a security guard she would not discuss the matter and referred questions to the Moscow city authorities.

The Moscow city spokeswoman said "there was no political element" in what was happening to the library.

"There is no intention to 'destroy' or 'kill something off," she said in emailed comments. "On the contrary, by transferring the books ... we are not only preserving the Library of Ukrainian Literature's books, but also believe it will facilitate the popularization of the Ukrainian literary legacy."

The Kremlin has declined to comment, but when asked about the Ukrainian library in December 2015, President Vladimir Putin said he knew nothing about its problems, but that it was important it should not "in any circumstances" be lost.

"We're keen to find out what kind of new life the library can have without any books," said employee Tatyana Muntyan. "We come to work each day and don't know what awaits us."

(Editing by Giles Elgood)

MOSUL, Iraq Iraqi government forces battling Islamic State for Mosul took control of a main bridge over the Tigris river on Wednesday and advanced towards the mosque where the group's leader declared a caliphate in 2014, federal police said.

WASHINGTON The top Republican and Democrat on the U.S. Senate Banking Committee both said on Wednesday that sanctions imposed on Russia over its involvement in Ukraine must not be lifted without drastic changes by Russia.

BRUSSELS/VIENNA Turkey has blocked some military training and other work with NATO "partner countries" in an apparent escalation of a diplomatic dispute with EU states, officials and sources said on Wednesday.

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Disappearing books: How Russia is shuttering its Ukrainian library - Reuters

Ukraine’s Slow Struggle for Decentralization – Carnegie Endowment … – Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

This publication is part of Carnegies Reforming Ukraine project and is supported in part by grants from the Center for East European and International Studies (Zentrum fr Osteuropa- und internationale Studien, ZOiS), the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, and the Open Society Foundations.

The decentralization reforms that began in 2014, although incomplete, have already brought significant change to Ukraine. After two decades of power being concentrated in the capital, new regional administrations now have more responsibility for local services. Many of these authorities have larger budgets than their predecessors and are using these funds to improve roads and schools. The new administrations have greater prospects for economic development and enjoy more respect in Kyiv.

However, there remain many bottlenecks that prevent the successful completion of the reforms. The decentralization process has proceeded without a political consensus on what the role of the state should be in Ukraine in the wake of the 20132014 Euromaidan revolution. Civil society regards decentralization as a means of reducing the influence of what it perceives as a captured state on Ukrainian public life. Western donors, who have provided technical and financial assistance to help implement the changes, see decentralization as a tool of democratization that the country badly needs to reverse attempts by the administration of former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych to appropriate power. The central authorities in Kyiv, wary of relinquishing too much power, do not show the same commitment to the reforms as do their Western partners.

The process is especially unpopular in Ukraines parliament, the Rada, where some opposition politicians allege that decentralization is an underhand effort by the administration of Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko to exert new power over the regions via the appointment of presidential prefects across the country.

A further complication is that for many of Ukraines Western partners, decentralization is an instrument they believe can fix the problem of Russian-backed separatism in Ukraines southeast. That is why the constitutional amendments required for decentralization were put in the same legislative package as the proposed legal changes stipulated in the controversial Minsk agreements, which aim to end the war in southeastern Ukraine. But this move has helped make the reforms a target for opposition politicians. It is now highly unlikely that the ruling coalition will be able to muster the 300 votes it needs in the Rada to pass these constitutional amendments.

In this political context, Ukraines decentralization reforms have lost momentum. However, as the process is already delivering results on the ground, the government needs to find creativity to pursue it, even if it cannot be underpinned by constitutional changes.

Discussion of decentralization reform is as old as independent Ukraine. In 1991, the new country inherited a centralized state model that gave local councils very few responsibilities. Administrative divisions made for small and unviable territorial units. Ukraine had 24 oblasts (regions) as well as three areas with a special status: Crimea, Kyiv, and Sevastopol. At the next level down, there were 490 rayons (districts), including 458 towns, 783 smaller settlements, and 10,279 villages.

Several Ukrainian governments attempted decentralization reforms, but with limited success. Until 2010, most of the efforts were focused on fiscal rather than political and regulatory decentralization. A new budget code, introduced in 2001, established a system of direct fiscal transfers between the central government and regional administrations and a transparent formula for the allocation of intragovernmental transfers.

However, constant political infighting and a persistent reflex in Kyiv to maintain central control blocked the political devolution local authorities needed to manage their own spending. The Yanukovych administration, which took office in 2010, simply recentralized power, transferring important responsibilities back from rayons and oblasts to central ministries.

The Euromaidan revolution reenergized the decentralization process. Both post-Euromaidan governments have declared decentralization to be one of the pillars of their reform agenda. At least on paper, progress has been swift. The main legislative framework for decentralization was outlined in the concept note on the reform of local governance that was approved by the Cabinet of Ministers on April 1, 2014. The initiative was justified by the need to address poor living standards, especially in rural areas, ineffective use of resources, and a lack of institutional capacity in Ukraine to provide services to the population.

The plan envisaged a country with the same 24 oblasts and three special areas as before, as well as approximately 100 rayons, while 1,500 hromadas (communities) would be created out of the towns, settlements, and villages. Each administrative tier would have both elected councils and administrative representatives appointed from above. The proposal included constitutional amendments that would replace the old local administrations with prefects appointed by the president and would confirm the rights of territorial communities to levy local taxes and fees.

Then, international pressure on Kyiv to adhere to the Minsk agreements complicated the issue. Separate legislation regulating local self-government in Ukraines eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions, which are currently outside the control of the government in Kyiv, was added to the draft constitutional changes on decentralization. The amendments, which had already been approved by the Constitutional Court of Ukraine, were passed by the Rada in a first reading on August 31, 2015. But the process was effectively halted the same day when violent protests erupted outside the parliament building and four guardsmen were killed in a grenade attack. The violence vividly illustrated how fragile the political consensus in Ukraine is on these questions.

In May 2016, the Cabinet of Ministers attempted to get the process back on track by including decentralization measures in an ambitious five-point action plan. Using its executive power, the government has even sponsored draft bills to implement the constitutional changes whenever they are eventually approved by the Rada. The plan set the objectives of establishing viable local self-government by amalgamating small communities into larger ones, trimming the functions of higher-level regional administrations, and pledging adequate funding for local self-government, especially in the fields of health and education. A greater challenge is the as yet distant goal of giving communities the right to manage their agricultural land resources.

Several parties in the Rada continue to strongly oppose some of the changes. Opposition is focused on the proposed institution of presidential prefects who, after the constitutional amendments, would take over functions previously held by regional administrations and would oversee decisions made at the local level. Samopomich (Self-Reliance), a party in the first post-Euromaidan government coalition, has strongly criticized the proposal as a new form of presidential centralization. For this and other reasons, Samopomich has joined with other opposition groups in the parliament such as former Ukrainian prime minister Yulia Tymoshenkos Batkivshchyna (Fatherland) party and the Opposition Bloc to vote down the governments proposals to institute this change.

Against all the odds, the technical implementation of decentralization reforms has moved forward, thanks in large part to Western financial and political support.

The first positive step was a 2015 law on the voluntary consolidation of hromadas, which allows for the amalgamation of existing communities into bigger units. So far, 367 new hromadas have been formed, or around 25 percent of the planned total. These newly amalgamated communities have received new responsibilities and are permitted to determine the size and structure of their own executive administrations, even though the central government still decides on the salary levels of local employees.

Support for this process varies widely across Ukraines regions. City, village, and settlement heads who were elected to office in 2015 and want to serve out their full terms are resisting the merger of their districts with others. Some mayors who enjoy popularity and are in conflict with local councils are more willing to start the amalgamation process to speed up the reelection of those councils.

Fiscal decentralization has set new rules for the allocation of taxes to local budgets. A total of 60 percent of personal income tax, 100 percent of state duty, and 100 percent of the fees for administrative services are now paid into local budgets. Meanwhile, the overall size of local debt should be lower than 200 percent of the average annual projected size of a budgets development revenue (or 400 percent in the case of Kyiv). In a radical change, local administrations have gained the right to levy a local property tax and a local excise tax on alcohol, tobacco, and fuel. They are also allowed to borrow larger sums than before from the central government and banks to finance their spending projects.

Fiscal decentralization has brought opportunities and fresh challenges. In 2016, the budgets of the 159 communities amalgamated in 2015 increased by 49 percent on the previous year, to 132 billion hryvnia ($4.9 billion). Ukraines 2017 budget foresees a 23 percent increase in local budgets. Yet, there are concerns that the revenue base of these communities may not be sustainable, due to the climate of political uncertainty.

Moreover, the reforms have cut central subsidies to some areas and may widen the already-large inequality gap between different regions. The early winners are small western Ukrainian cities, and the losers are those that depend on heavy industry. Many people have criticized the process on the grounds that smaller settlements are losing out.

Most of the new funds have been spent on the repair of roads or on educational and cultural institutionsa rare treat in Ukraine. The repair of the countrys notoriously poor roads, made possible by a central subsidy for local infrastructure projects worth 1 billion hryvnia ($36.9 million), is probably the most visible and welcome result so far of the fiscal decentralization process.

In another significant change, the New Ukrainian School program gives local hromada administrations responsibility for primary and secondary education, including the provision of preschool places. A new network of high-quality hub schools is set to be created, to take on children from a wider geographical area and consolidate resources for providing better-quality education. Local hromadas are also due to be given responsibility for primary healthcaredoctors, paramedics, clinics, and obstetric centerswhile secondary care will be provided on the basis of new hospital districts formed to correspond with new larger rayons.

Bigger budgets pose another challenge to local authorities, as they require greater managerial competence, which is often lacking. Local governments need professionals in public health, education, infrastructure, communal services, energy efficiency, and economic development. However, depopulation and urbanization make it very difficult for small rural communities to attract qualified personnel. International technical assistance projects aim to tackle this problem, but Ukraine needs a long-term overall improvement of its education system to train the necessary public administration professionals.

Much work is needed to see the decentralization process through to a successful conclusion. The current plan for the creation of new hromadas does not contain a clear sequence of steps, and there is no clarity as to when the voluntary amalgamation of communities becomes a compulsory process. A more concrete implementation plan with clear deadlines for each stage of reform is necessary. Policymakers also need to improve the constitutional framework for decentralization and streamline the legislation for the amalgamation process to allow the merger of territories from different rayons. Yet in the current fragile political situation, there is little hope of the Rada passing the relevant legislation. That puts a responsibility on the executive to move the reforms forward on its own.

The government needs to communicate more effectively the importance of the reforms to the public, which supports the process in general terms but does not understand it properly. The government should also send stronger messages on the sequencing of the reforms and the need for clear deadlines. The Central Reform Office for Decentralization can play the key role in managing this process and making it accountable to donors.

Another problem is that the legal status of the powers delegated to local communities has not yet been defined, because the necessary constitutional amendments have not been passed, leaving the reforms that have been enacted so far vulnerable to changes in the political climate. Moreover, under current rules, hromadas from different neighboring rayons are not allowed to merge. A draft law allowing the amalgamation of 28 hromadas across rayon boundaries was voted down in the parliament on December 6, 2016.

A paradox of the decentralization reforms is that while most of the Ukrainian public supports it, the majority of those same people hold a paternalistic outlook and expect the central government to take care of them. Polls show that only 32 percent of citizens are ready to engage in local-level decisionmaking, and just 15 percent believe that they can influence the situation in their own municipality.

Ordinary Ukrainians are cautious in part because politically and economically strong patrons are emerging or reemerging in the regions, using the decentralization process to benefit themselves and their clients. Local oligarchs still have the most resources to compete in and win elections.

Yet at least local government enjoys a higher level of trust among Ukrainians than do national institutions, which are regarded with cynicism. More than half of Ukrainians support the delegation of more authority to the local level. Anecdotal evidence suggests that citizens in amalgamated communities tend to engage more in public hearings and community meetings to discuss local issues than those in nonamalgamated areas. According to a report by the EUs Committee of the Regions, local citizens are particularly engaged when it comes to issues that are of paramount importance to individuals, families and communities, such as schooling, public safety and the environment.

On the local level, the new amalgamated communities now face the challenge of how to properly manage the extra funds they have been allocated. They have a chance to increase economic development in their regions and make them economically sustainable. But this will not happen without necessary data collection and monitoring of the process by both the central government and Western donors. A more transparent process should in turn spark more engagement from local citizens.

Ideally, decentralization reforms would press forward against a background of political consensus at both the national and the local level. However, this is not feasible, unfortunately. The current ruling coalition is too weak to push the reforms forward, while the Poroshenko administrations main immediate objective is to conserve the present political rule.

The key may lie in public engagement. If the Ukrainian public can get behind the decentralization efforts, this will inspire the government and civil society to expend more energy on the process and save these reforms from being aborted by political infightingas has happened on previous occasions over the last two decades.

Yulia Yesmukhanova is a Ukrainian expert on decentralization reform and good governance.

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Ukraine's Slow Struggle for Decentralization - Carnegie Endowment ... - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

TASS: World – Ukraine’s current authorities unable to prevent … – TASS

EPA/KONSTANTIN GRISHIN

MOSCOW, March 15. /TASS/. The president of the Middle East Institute, Yevgeny Satanovsky, believes that the Ukrainian authorities have lost the ability to keep the situation in the country under control. He made a statement to this effect on Wednesday at a TASS news conference devoted to the presentation of his book titled Dialogues, co-authored with Israeli political scientist, former chief of the bureau for relations with Jews in the CIS and Eastern Europe Nativ, Yakov Kedmi.

"As far as Ukraine is concerned, I believe that it has fallen apart already but it has not yet developed the awareness it has broken up," Satanovsky said. "The government is unable to enforce law and order even in the capital. What kind of kind of country is that? Its an ex-country."

Among the main problems the Ukrainian authorities are unable to cope with Satanovsky mentioned "private armies, governors insubordination and the governments inability to put under control ordinary gangs or gangs professing some ideology."

For his part, Kedmi pointed to the grave crime situation in Ukraine and predicted that it would be turning worse.

"Those who will find themselves in Ukraines near future will feel nostalgic about the current situation," he warns. "What will happen next I do not know. Ukraines future can be seen in the current events on the border between Ukraine, on the one hand, and the Donetsk and Lugansk republics, on the other. And the events in Kievs streets in front of Russian banks and the crime situation in Kiev will soon be a sweet past in contrast to Ukraines near future."

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