Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

New wave of Edmonton-based troops deploy to Ukraine as forces battle pro-Russia separatists – Edmonton Journal

120 troops from 3rd Canadian Division deploy to Ukraine as part of Operation Unifier, at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. David Bloom / Postmedia

With the hum of the Airbus CC-150 engines in the background, 3rdCanadian Division commander Brig.-Gen.f Simon Hetherington reminded troops deploying to Ukraine on Friday of the importance of their training mission.

The 120 Edmonton-based soldiers will spend the next six months in the west of the country training Ukrainian soldiers in preparation for their fight against Russian-backed separatists in the east of the country as part of a conflict that has been raging since the middle of 2014.

What skills youve supplied them with will save their lives, Hetherington said just before the troops boarded the plane.

Brig.-Gen. Simon Hetherington speaks to 120 troops from 3rd Canadian Division as they prepare to deploy toUkraine as part of Operation Unifier, at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. Photo by David Bloom David Bloom / Postmedia

Around 2,600 Ukrainian troops have rotated through atraining program designed to professionalize the Ukrainian armed forces and enhance their capabilities across a wide spectrum of operations, including everything from weapons training to combat first aid and communications.

Hetherington said the mission is incredibly important.

Theyve got an armed forces that has been decimated over a number of years of neglect in terms of funding and age and time, so we are helping rebuild their armed forces, he said.

The challenge to this is they are rebuilding it while in combat in the east of the country.

Outbound deputy commanding officer Maj. Alex Nitu said the aim of the mission is to enable the Ukrainian military to become self-sufficient in delivering its own training programs.

Nitu said the mission is being well-received by the Ukrainian military.

The idea is we are going to work ourselves out of a job in all these things because they are going to become self-sufficient, he said.

(We are) building skill sets and professionalizing their force and getting to a point where they are institutionally capable of delivering all the training they require to themselves.

jgraney@postmedia.com

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A soldier from 3rd Canadian Division waits to leave forUkraine as part of Operation Unifier, at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. 120 soldiers from 3rd Canadian Division left for the Ukraine Friday. David Bloom / Postmedia

Soldiers from 3rd Canadian Division wait to deploy toUkraine as part of Operation Unifier, at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. David Bloom / Postmedia

Brig.-Gen. Simon Hetherington, right, shakes hands with 120 troops from 3rd Canadian Division at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. David Bloom / Postmedia

120 troops from 3rd Canadian Division deploy toUkraine as part of Operation Unifier, at the Edmonton International Airport Friday, March 3, 2017. David Bloom / Postmedia

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New wave of Edmonton-based troops deploy to Ukraine as forces battle pro-Russia separatists - Edmonton Journal

Germany warns Ukraine over graft – Deutsche Welle

German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel in Ukraine on Friday urged lawmakers to battle endemic corruption, tying the issue to the country's economic development and conflict with Russian-backed rebels.

"It is an important task in your land to ensure the reform process is successful," Gabriel told a group of parliamentarians in the capital Kyiv. "The strongest weapon of democracy is not the military; rather it is to show that people in democracies live better than those in countries without it."

Children must have a bright future, pensioners must be secure and infrastructure built, he said. "That is the biggest danger to foreign aggressors, that the country is well-developed," Gabriel said.

Germans want to help Ukraine, but Gabriel said they also want to ensure that money reaches the people and isn't frittered away through corruption.

Ukraine has struggled to pass a series of structural reforms and tackle corruption, prompting the International Monetary Fund to delay payments of a $17.5 billion (16.6 billion euro) rescue package.

The slow pace of reform and continued corruption have hampered the war effort and undermined efforts to accelerate thepolitical process to end nearly three years of conflict with Russia-backed separatists that has claimed some 10,000 lives and displaced tens of thousands.

Gabriel said it was important to first ensure a sustainable ceasefire in the east and the withdrawal of heavy weapons from the contact line as agreed under the Minsk agreements.

"Then the moment will arrive, when one can create the hope for a political process," Gabriel said. "We know who the aggressor is. We know who broke international law. And we know it isn't only about the conflict in Ukraine," he said, hinting at Russia's broader geopolitical goals.

Gabriel's visit came as Ukrainian authorities announced that the head of the country's tax and customs service was suspected in a graft case that cost the state $75 million (71 million euros).

The National Anti-Corruption Bureau said Roman Nasirov was suspected of "abuse of office, which resulted in grievous harm" to the state. He has been removed from his position as tax boss as an investigation continues.

Investigators believe Nasirov helped parliamentarian Oleksandr Onishchenko by restricting taxes on gas extraction companies. Onishchenko is currently on the run.

Masked anti-graft agents gave Nasirov the official notice naming him as a suspect at a hospital where he has been after claiming heart complications, the same day his office was raided.

"I, like many Ukrainian citizens, have doubts about the unexpected transfer to hospital, as this has become a historic tradition for the Ukrainian political elite and top management," anti-corruption prosecutor Nazar Kholodnytsky said.

If convicted, Nasirov would be the first high level official to be prosecuted for graft since the 2014 pro-Western uprising that toppled former President Viktor Yanukovych.

cw/msh(AFP, dpa, Reuters)

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Germany warns Ukraine over graft - Deutsche Welle

Republicans adopted pro-Russia stance on Ukraine just after Trump officials met with Russian ambassador – The Independent

Donald Trump appears to have pushed for the Republicans to adopt a pro-Moscow policy over Ukraine just as his senior aides with meeting with Russias US Ambassador.

At the Republican National Convention last summer, the party agreed to insert language into its platform that opposed arming or providing Ukraine with weapons to take on pro-Russian rebels. At the time, Mr Trump told an interviewer he wasnt involved in it.

But now, a former adviser to Mr Trumphas revealed that the push to change the platform came after the direct intervention of the New York tycoon. Mr Trump had hinted as to his views on Ukraine during a speech in the spring of 2016, where the Russian Ambassador, Sergey Kislyak, was among the guests.

CNN said that Republican advisor JD Gordon had said the move to push the change in the partys policy was to make it align with Mr Trumps personal views.

Mr Gordon previously said that he did not speak publicly at the GOP national security sub-committee meeting, where the amendment was discussed. Originally the policy called for providing lethal defence weapons to the Ukrainian army to fend off Russian-backed rebels. It was changed to providing appropriate assistance to Ukraine.

The broadcaster said that Mr Gordon had now revealed that he and others advocated for the GOP platform to include language against arming Ukrainians against pro-Russian rebels because this was in line with Trump's views.

Gordon says Trump said at the meetingthat he didnt want to go to World War Three over Ukraine, CNN said.

Trump says he still has 'total' confidence in Jeff Sessions

Mr Gordon also confirmed that he and another policy advisor to Mr Trump, Carter Page, met Mr Kislyak at the Republican National Convention (RNC) in Cleveland last July. Mr Gordon did not respond to inquiries on Friday.

The development comes as Mr Trumps administration is facing further scrutiny over its alleged links to Russia.

This week, Mr Trumps Attorney General was forced to recuse himself from overseeing the federal inquiry into Russsias alleged interference in the US election and its possible links to members of Mr Triumps team, after it emerged he had twice met with Mr Kislyak. He had previously told senators while under oath that he had never done so. One of the meeting was at the RNC.

It also emerged that two other senior members of Mr Trumps team, former general Mike Flynn and policy adviser Jared Kushner, had met Mr Kislyak in December to establish initial contacts with the Russian government. Mr Flynn was in January forced to resign as his national security adviser after he lied about a conversation he had with Mr Kislyak - prior to Mr Trumps taking office - at which the issue of sanctions was discussed.

Mr Trump has never hidden his wish to try and reset the US-Russia relationship.

At the speech he delivered at Washington DCs Mayflower Hotel in April, Mr Trump said: I believe an easing of tensions and improved relations with Russia- from a position of strength only - is possible, absolutely possible. Some say the Russians wont be reasonable. I intend to find out.

Yet after the Republican position on Ukraine was changed that summer, Mr Trump he claimed he had nothing to do with it.

I wasn't involved in that, Mr Trump said in an interview with ABC. Honestly, I was not involved.

Several investigations are underway into Russias alleged interference in the 2016 election - an operation supposedly undertaken to benefit Mr Trump. Mr Trump has repeatedly denied that either he or any members of his team have had any contact with Russia, or colluded in anyway in its efforts to influence the election.

An unverified dossier presented to Trump in January by top US intelligence officials allegedthat Mr Trump agreed to sideline the issue of Russian intervention in Ukraine during his campaign after Russia promised to feed the emails it stole from prominent Democrats inboxes to WikiLeaks.

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Republicans adopted pro-Russia stance on Ukraine just after Trump officials met with Russian ambassador - The Independent

Ukraine’s Tax Chief Targeted In Corruption Probe – RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

KYIV -- Ukraines tax and customs service chief has been suspended from his post amid a graft investigation that marks a rare attempt to prosecute a senior official on suspicion of corruption.

The government said on March 3 that State Fiscal Service (DFS) Director Roman Nasirov has been temporarily relieved of his duties.

Meanwhile, a special prosecutor tasked with fighting corruption said he will seek Nasirov's arrest on suspicion of "abuse of office leading to serious financial losses," voicing concern that he could try to flee the country.

The moves came a day after the National Anticorruption Bureau (NABU) said it attempted to serve Nasirov, who was in a Kyiv hospital, with a document identifying him as a suspect.

Minutes later, Nasirov was transferred to an intensive care unit after suffering what a doctor said was a heart attack.

WATCH: Ukraine Tax Chief Falls Ill As He Faces Corruption Charges

The Specialized Anticorruption Prosecutors office (SAP) says it suspects Nasirov might have helped fugitive lawmaker Oleksandr Onyshchenko dodge taxes.

Onyshchenko, who fled Ukraine before being stripped of his parliamentary immunity from prosecution last summer, claims to have recorded conversations detailing corruption involving Poroshenko and his allies.

He is wanted in Kyiv on suspicion of fraud and of embezzling the equivalent of more than $100 million in tax revenues from natural gas delivery contracts.

Nasirov's lawyer, Oleksandr Miroshnik, said on March 3 that his client remained unconscious following surgery. He said that Nasirov had already been ill and that his hospitalization has nothing to do with the ongoing investigation.

Miroshnik added that NABU's "attempt" to hand the document to Nasirov to inform that he is a suspect was conducted illegally.

The pro-Western government that came to power after protests known as the Euromaidan pushed Moscow-friendly President Viktor Yanukovych from power in 2014 has been under pressure to tackle corruption and reform the economy.

Poroshenko has pledged to root out graft, but no senior official has been successfully prosecuted for corruption by his government.

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Ukraine's Tax Chief Targeted In Corruption Probe - RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty

Financier’s dark dream goes to the big screen – The Globe and Mail

Would it sound cruel to suggest that the world is better off because Ian Ihnatowycz had his dream of being a concert pianist crushed when he was 17 yearsold?

At the time this was the late 1960s Ihnatowycz was studying at the Royal Conservatory of Music in Toronto under the revered Boris Berlin. I was told by him that I have the artistic interpretation, I play beautifully, with soul. But I dont have the technique, Ihnatowycz explains, sitting in the office of First Generation Capital, his private investment holding company, on the 35th floor of the Scotiabank Plaza in downtown Toronto. And you have to develop the technique by the time youre 10 or 12; by 17, its toolate.

He said, Youll make a good teacher. But youll never make it on the concert stage. Ihnatowycz chuckles sheepishly. I dont have the patience to be a teacher, so I said, Thanks but no thanks, and headed in a different direction. I went into science. And the science eventually turned intobusiness.

And the combination of science and business has served me extremelywell.

It has also served the Canadian cultural community rather well: Ihnatowycz is a noted art collector and philanthropist who has given significant sums to organizations such as no hard feelings the Royal Conservatory. He and his wife, Marta Witer, who also studied there, gave $5-million to the school in 2005 for the sparkling renovation of its Ihnatowycz Hall, and also endowed its Ihnatowycz Prize inPiano.

And now, he has gotten into the mucky business of film production, helping to shepherd Bitter Harvest a new romantic drama about a moment in history that continues to reverberate across newspaper front pages even today intoexistence.

Oscar nominated editor Stuart Baird, left, worked on Bitter Harvest with financier Ian Ihnatowycz,right.

Mark Tillie

After leaving music behind, Ihnatowycz worked for a time in pharmacology, earned an MBA at what is now Western Universitys Ivey Business School, and went into money management, starting his own firm, Acuity Investment Management, in 1991. (Some of the fruits of his success are on vivid display at his office: a number of alternately serene and striking canvasses by William Kurelek, Jack Bush, and OscarCahn.)

In 2011, Ihnatowycz and his partners sold Acuity for $339-million. So when the actor and first-time screenwriter Richard Bachynsky Hoover came knocking on his door with a script about the Holodomor Joseph Stalins campaign of oppression, forced starvation and purges that killed millions of Ukrainians and decimated the countrys political and cultural leadership in the early 1930s Ihnatowycz found himself drawn in: His parents had survived the genocide, fleeing Ukraine for Canada after the Second WorldWar.

He had never worked in film, but he realized that, while there were numerous very well-made documentaries about the Holodomor, no English-language feature had been made on the subject. Outside of Ukraine, almost no one knows about it, he said. And I thought, well, you know, this is too important a topic not to have a film made, Western-style, with Western actors, and cinematographers and editors, and people that can make a film for lack of a better term Hollywood quality, that would appeal to a Western audience. Ihnatowycz put up the entire budget a reported $20-million (U.S.) himself.

I felt connected to it emotionally, and I thought that it didnt really matter to me whether we made a lot of money. What was more important to me was that the film be made and it be seen by as many people in the West as possible, and let the chips fall where they may, in terms offinances.

Bitter Harvest, which opened in select Canadian cinemas on Friday, stars the British actor Max Irons (Woman in Gold) as Yuri, a budding artist from the Ukrainian countryside. As a young boy under czarist and then Leninist rule, Yuri is counselled by his father (played by Canadian actor Barry Pepper) on the benighted history of their occupied homeland. They can never break your spirit, the father tells theson.

Max Irons and Samantha Barks in BitterHarvest.

Mark Tillie

But when Lenin dies, Stalin institutes a brutal campaign to crush Ukraines aspirations of independence that catches Yuri, his true love Natalka (Samantha Barks), his warrior grandfather Ivan (Terence Stamp) and their village in its pincers. As the people revolt against his orders to collectivize their farms and other property, Stalin orders all crops to be confiscated and the borders shut, dooming millions to death.

The film was shot largely in Ukraine, with a local crew who, Ihnatowycz says, were often overcome with emotion. Theyd say, Were filming a scene that reminds me of the stories that my grandfather or great-grandfather used to tell us about what happened during theHolodomor.

But if the story was well known to them, the filmmakers struggled with how to tell it to a Westernaudience.

To give you an example, there have been hundreds of films made with the Holocaust as the backdrop, Ihnatowycz notes. So when you have a film with that as the backdrop, all you really need is 10 seconds of a Holocaust scene, everybody immediately knows what the context is, and the director can focus on the story. We couldnt do that, because its not completely understandable to the viewer. We need to lay the historic backdrop. That made it twice as difficult, and we didnt want it to come across like adocumentary.

When they test-screened the first cut, Ihnatowycz says, the feedback we got from people who didnt know about the Holodomor was, they wereconfused.

Once he helped clarify the narrative, he says, he stepped aside and let the filmmakers make the necessary changes, including re-shoots, in an artistic way. Though he had initially signed on as an executive producer its just the fancy term for the guy who provides the money, he laughs everyone insisted I become an official producer. I moved from just being a financier to one who had an important impact on thestory.

From left to right: Max Irons, George Mendeluk, Samantha Barks and Ian Ihnatowycz attended the gala screening of Bitter Harvest in London, England on Feb.20.

Dave J. Hogan / GettyImages

The film isnt Ihnatowyczs only effort to spread the word about the Holodomor, the full truth of which was suppressed until the fall of the Soviet Union. He walks over to a credenza and picks up a keepsake that is distributed to Canadian schoolchildren as part of a new touring exhibit on the Holodomor he helped fund. Five small stalks of wheat are attached to an illustrated card that outlines the law Stalin passed against so-called misappropriation of collective farm property, even five stalks ofgrain.

If you were caught stealing as little as that, you were shot on sight, he says ruefully, handing over the keepsake. Many children were executed, actually, when they were trying to take that to makebread.

That detail wasnt included in the film, in part because even Ihnatowycz wasnt aware of it until recently. You learn more and more as you go along, heexplains.

At one point in the film, a stranger takes note of Yuris talent as an artist, and tells him that, as someone who can depict truth, he has a duty to tell the world about the horrors unfolding in the country. With Ukraine continuing to be a political football today, does Ihnatowycz feel Yuris responsibility? I suppose it is a duty, he says slowly, looking down at hisfeet.

Let me put it this way. One cannot really understand a country any country, not just Ukraine, any country unless you know its history, and you know the trials and the tribulations that its people have livedthrough.

In todays world, especially, there is a lot of misinformation, he adds. I just think that weve created something that I think will provide the foundation for better understanding. And hopefully will allow the leadership of the West to make the right decisions, goingforward.

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Financier's dark dream goes to the big screen - The Globe and Mail