Username Password
Monday, February 11th, 2008
Search    
 
News
Industry
Banking & Finance
Telecoms & IT
Real Estate
Travel & Leisure
Current Edition
Previous Edition
Subscription
Advertising
About
Contact
News

KREMLIN ACID TEST FOR ORANGE UNITY

This month President Yushchenko and Prime Minister Tymoshenko will travel separately to Moscow for energy talks, with Russia threatening more cut-offs and price hikes if Ukraine dares follow through on threats to cut murky middlemen out of the trade and raise transit tariffs. The outcome of the 2009 presidential campaign may hinge on whether Ukraine’s two rival Orange leaders can put aside their energy policy differences and maintain a united front More

PROXY WAR OVER PRIVATISATION CHIEF

Valentyna Semenyuk appeared to be heading out of office last week following a move by the new government to replace her as head of the State Property Fund with a loyalist committed to the ambitious Tymoshenko privatisation programme. However, Semenyuk received a reprieve in the form of a Presidential decree as Viktor Yushchenko moved to reassert his authority over his erstwhile Orange ally as the power struggle between the two entered a new phase More

MAKING MOVIES IN UKRAINE

Ukraine’s film industry all but collapsed after independence but the recent improvement in the political and economic climate has led to a relative boom in the industry over the last few years and Ukraine is now emerging as a unique and inexpensive, place to make movies Subscribe

NEW US PRESIDENT, NO SURPRISES

Whoever takes George Bush’s place in the White House following the US presidential elections later this year, the odds are that they will continue to build ever-closer relations with Ukraine. Hillary Clinton, John McCain and Barack Obama have all visited the country and each has shown personal interest in strengthening US-Ukrainian engagement Subscribe

TIME FOR BUILDING NOT BUREAUCRACY AS UEFA ISSUES EURO 2012 YELLOW CARD

Ukraine received a yellow card from UEFA in late January over the slow progress in preparing the country ahead of Euro 2012, with a growing number of rivals lining up to replace Ukraine as host nation. The next six months will be crucial in determining whether Kyiv officials can cut through the bureaucracy, with news of a solution to the Olympic Stadium crisis offering a glimmer of hope in an otherwise depressing situation Subscribe

START OF THE YULIAN AGE?

The return of Yulia Tymoshenko to power has not been greeted with the kind of international fanfare accorded the Orange Revolution three years earlier, but nevertheless there is reason to believe that an equally great political watershed may have been reached More

GATEWAY TO THE EU BLOCKED

Huge queues of heavy goods lorries have stretched along both sides of the Ukrainian-Polish border for the past two weeks as a Polish customs workers’ labour dispute threatens to throttle Ukraine’s lucrative transit trade More

TYMOSHENKO REOPENS ROAD TO EUROPE

Yulia Tymoshenko’s late January visit to Brussels, where she met with high-level officials from the European Union, the European Parliament and NATO, has changed international perceptions of Ukraine. It is now Tymoshenko – not Viktor Yushchenko – who is seen by Brussels and Washington as carrying the torch and the hopes of the Orange Revolution More

NEW STATUES, OLD BATTLES

The battle for the soul of Ukraine is currently being fought on many fronts, from the political arena to the country’s classrooms and universities. As passions have flared in the past few years the debate has generated a number of new monuments to the most controversial figures in Ukrainian history – and the trend looks set to continue in 2008 More

GERMANY READY AS ALTERNATE HOST?

As UEFA officials expressed concern over the lack of progress in Euro 2012 preparations by co-hosts Ukraine and Poland last week, German footballing legend Franz Beckenbauer opened up a public discussion on potential alternative venues for the championships when he stated: “If Germany is asked it would surely be ready. The infrastructure is perfect.” Subscribe

UKRAINE’S ENERGY MIDDLEMAN DENIES LINK TO ARRESTED MOB BOSS

The arrest of alleged Russian mafia figure Semyon Mogilevich on the streets of Moscow in late January made headlines globally. It also provoked a string of denials from the key figure in Ukraine’s energy dealings with Russia and thrust the activities of energy trade intermediary RosUkrEnergo into the spotlight once again Subscribe

UNITY THE KEY TO INTEGRATION DRIVE

The Ukrainian government seems to be making progress on the three major pillars of its westward integration strategy: entry to the World Trade Organisation (WTO), accession to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), and further economic integration with the EU. This push has been largely down to the unified front among political leaders in Kyiv, bringing to an end the often contradictory and confusing policies of the past few years Subscribe

NATO’S UNWITTING RUSSOPHILE CHEERLEADERS

Ukraine’s recent application to join the NATO Membership Action Plan has provoked a new round of threats and indignation from the Kremlin. It would be ironic but certainly not unprecedented if Ukraine’s largely uninterested population were driven into the NATO camp by the arrogant posturing of Moscow and the rhetoric of Ukraine’s Russophile minority More

YUSHCHENKO COURTS ENERGY INVESTORS

President Yushchenko used his trip to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland last week to urge international players to invest in Ukrainian energy sector in what was the latest attempt to arrange alternatives to Russia’s regional energy stranglehold More

CURTAIN FALLING ON THE YANUKOVYCH ERA?

The Tymoshenko government has begun the New Year with a flurry of activity, but as attention focuses on the ruling Orange coalition, one question is being increasingly asked around Kyiv - where is Yanukovych? His current low profile has fuelled rumours of a rift within the Party of Regions and led to speculation that we could be about to witness a major political shift in the industrial heartlands of the east More

DEMOCRACY AND DEVELOPMENT: WINNERS SHOULDN’T TAKE ALL

The fragility of democracy has been on brutal display in recent weeks. The assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Pakistan and the violent riots and contested election in Kenya have tempered hopes for progress in these two countries and both scenarios highlight the threats posed to the global current democracy-building process and appear to support the need for civilised handovers of power in transition countries like Ukraine Subscribe

FEARS MOUNT OF TRAFFICKING BOOM VIA THE EU’S NEW BACK DOOR

The December enlargement of the Schengen zone to include the bulk of the European Union’s new former Eastern Bloc member states has created the largest single, unified border on the continent’s history and made Ukraine the EU’s major border partner. Fears are rising that the appeal of visa-free travel across Europe will lead to a rise in people-trafficking and illegal immigration via Ukraine’s infamously porous frontiers Subscribe

MINISTER OF THE FLYING FIST

Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko literally hit the headlines last week after news leaked out that he had allegedly punched Kyiv Mayor Leonid Chernovetskiy at an official meeting. This latest scuffle between members of the elite has led to renewed demands that state officials behave in a manner more befitting their status Subscribe

WAREHOUSING SECTOR GROWTH TO CONTINUE

In the past two years the Ukrainian warehouse storage market has seen huge growth in the number of high-quality facilities on offer, but the sector is still far from capacity. The major stumbling block to further exponential growth now appears to be the absence of land reform legislation needed to free up strategically located land plots Subscribe

DEMOCRACY’S WEAKEST LINK

With its free press, engaged electorate and thriving civil society, Ukraine is starting to look more and more like a functioning modern European democracy. The weakest link in the chain now appears to be Ukraine’s parliament, where rampant corruption and brutish tactics continue to overshadow the progress being made by the rest of the country More

CLOSER AND CLOSER TO WTO ENTRY

Last Wednesday the European Union signed a ground-breaking agreement with Ukraine that is expected to give the green light for the country to join the World Trade Organisation, a move that could also pave the way for a comprehensive free trade accord between Kyiv with the EU More

CAMPAIGN TO CLEAN UP A SYMBOL OF STATE CORRUPTION

The rising numbers of traffic police dotting Ukraine’s towns and cities has been the subject of heated debate in recent weeks as efforts to clean up the force and reduce accidents on the country’s deadly roads gather pace. Will the new administration be able to score a public victory to bolster the cause of reform, or will the experiment end in stalemate and frustration, as similar attempts did in 2005? More

CAMPAIGNING FOR CHANGE, CAPITULATING TO COMPROMISE

Democracies periodically hold elections, but only on occasion do they become special elections which usher in genuine change. Elections associated with a widespread public embrace of the need for change can prove to be revolutionary in their consequences, but only when politicians show the will to follow through on their campaign promises. Yushchenko’s political legacy will now depend on his ability to cooperate with the reform drive of the Tymoshenko government Subscribe

SCHENGEN ZONE EXPANSION HEIGHTENS UKRAINIAN FEARS OVER NEW ISOLATION

Protests were held in western Ukraine last week over a tough new visa regime introduced by Poland which will make effectively it harder for those living close to the border to continue moving freely between the two countries. The demonstrations come as officials in Kyiv attempt to negotiate a new deal which would ease fears over the new barriers Ukrainians face when travelling in the newly-expanded Schengen zone Subscribe

THE BASE APPEAL OF PUTIN’S POLEMICS

Last week’s row over the British Council’s operations in regional Russian cities provoked the latest Kremlin outburst against perceived Western arrogance, illustrating yet again both Russia’s historical insecurities and its continued readiness to use foreign enemies as totems in order to galvanise domestic support for the regime Subscribe

UKRAINIAN FOOTBALL HELD HOSTAGE BY DYNAMO KYIV NOMENKLATURA

Former Dynamo Kyiv trainer Oleksiy Mikhailichenko was named new national football coach last week, maintaining a stultifying tradition of reliance on Dynamo loyalists who served under Ukraine’s great tactician Valeriy Lobanovskiy. As a result a mere handful of personalities have dominated the top coaching positions in the sport for the past decade, spreading inertia and thwarting the emergence of a new generation of Ukrainian coaching talent Subscribe

YET MORE CONSTITUTIONAL CONUNDRUMS

Ukraine switched to a parliamentary-presidential system in early 2006 following changes to the constitution agreed to at the height of the Orange Revolution. However, after months of political conflict focusing on the constitution, the document is about to come under the microscope once more as part of a reform process that may see the country’s political system changed once more, with power swinging back away from parliament towards the presidency Subscribe

AN ACUTE OVERDOSE OF HOLIDAYS

The President recently proposed that parliament forego its annual winter holidays and work on throughout January. While the move is unlikely to be popular with politicians, it would certainly be a step in the right direction More

A SOLUTION TO THE SOVIET BANK SCANDAL?

The new government began the New Year attempting to implement its campaign pledge to return the Soviet-era savings which Ukrainians lost after the 1991 collapse, but will its efforts prove enough to appease voters and silence the many detractors who labelled the proposition wholly unrealistic? More

ENTER THE ICONS

Can the return of Yulia Tymoshenko to government in Kyiv pave the way for better relations with Russia, or will the two countries’ iconic political leaders clash once more? More

STATE MEDALS AND THE UNTOUCHABLE ELITE

Three years after mass street protests brought down a corrupt regime, progress in the fight for justice and equality before the law remains almost non-existent. Can Yulia Tymoshenko’s new government finally make an impact on the tangled web of institutional corruption that continues to dog Ukraine? Subscribe

THE NEW GOVERNMENT AT A GLANCE

Ukraine’s new Orange coalition government took power in mid-December, with a cabinet composed of appointees of the ruling BYUT and Our Ukraine/People’s Self-Defence blocs Subscribe

UKRAINE’S JEWISH GROUPS ANGERED AS ISRAEL SEEKS PILGRIM TOMB REMOVAL

One of Ukraine’s most remarkable cultural treasures and unlikely tourist attractions was under threat last week after the Israeli government announced plans to try and secure the removal of an important Jewish tomb in central Ukraine to Israel Subscribe

UNDERMINING THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS

Ukraine is gripped by Europe’s worst AIDS outbreak, but corruption among the state bodies charged with leading the fight against the epidemic is suspected of hindering efforts to stem the tide Subscribe

CAN TYMOSHENKO COMPLETE HER TRIUMPH?

As a year of political chaos and crises draws to a close, Yulia Tymoshenko appears to hold all the trump cards. In 2007 she was able to lobby successfully for new elections and then triumph at the polls, confirming her status as the early favourite for the 2009 presidency and continued dominance of the Orange camp. The question now is whether she can translate these gains into a firm grip on government More

UKRAINIAN DEMOCRACY: THE TERRIBLE TWOS

2007 proved a year of political earthquakes and constitutional ambiguities, with the country’s institutional framework often struggling to function under the burden of competing pressures applied by warring political factions. However, amid all the stage-managed protests, bribery allegations and judicial deadlock there are signs that a more mature democratic culture might finally be taking root in Ukraine More

APRIL 2007

Thousands head to Kyiv for stage-managed protests as Yushchenko disbands parliament, but Ukraine wins the right to co-host Euro 2012 Subscribe

DECEMBER 2007

The renewed Orange coalition installs their speaker but fails at the first attempt to have Tymoshenko elected PM Subscribe

FEBRUARY 2007

Tymoshenko visits America to call on the democratic world’s support for new parliamentary elections, while in Kyiv the real estate boom finally peaks Subscribe

JANUARY 2007

The battle of the “Two Viktors” intensifies, while controversial new energy regulations place a strain on much-needed energy sector foreign investment Subscribe

MARCH 2007

The public slaying of a suspected mobster with ties to Yanukovych raises fears of a return to banditry, while defections in parliament threaten to provoke a constitutional crisis Subscribe

MAY 2007

A last-minute compromise deal sets elections for September and rescues Ukraine from the brink, resolving months of deadlock Subscribe

NOVEMBER 2007

Ukraine mourns worst ever mining disaster and remembers the victims of Stalin’s genocide, while talks eventually produce renewed Orange coalition Subscribe

OCTOBER 2007

Huge electoral gains place Tymoshenko in the coalition driving seat but talks drag on all month, while a land grab scandal engulfs Kyiv’s mayor Subscribe

SEPTEMBER 2007

The election campaign dominates the headlines as Tymoshenko marches east in a bid to steal a portion of Yanukovych’s core vote Subscribe

SUMMER 2007: A LONG, HOT ONE

A phosphorus spill following a train crash in western Ukraine causes panic, UMC rebrands to MTS and summer ends with the election campaign gradually gathers pace Subscribe

HOPES REST ON UKRAINE’S ODD COUPLE

The chances of a renewed Orange coalition succeeding now appear to rest almost entirely on the ability of Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko to co-operate. Alternatively, any deterioration in their smouldering love/hate relationship could spell the end for Ukraine’s Euro-Atlantic ambitions More

SPEAKER VOTE PAVES WAY FOR ORANGE TRIUMPH

Scuffles broke out in the Ukrainian parliament last week as PMs fought over the election of the new session’s parliamentary speaker. Attempts to block the vote ultimately failed, and the election of leading Orange coalition figure Arseniy Yatsenyuk as speaker makes the return of Yulia Tymoshenko to the prime minister’s office appear increasingly likely More

THE SHIFTING BORDER OF EUROPEAN DEMOCRACY

Last weekend’s Russian parliamentary elections marked the final break with the lip service paid to democratic principles during the early Putin years. Will the international community now refrain from grouping the former Soviet republics together and acknowledge that the boundary between European democracy and Eurasian authoritarianism has moved eastwards to the border separating Ukraine and Russia? More

WAFER-THIN ORANGE COALITION FORMED: TYMOSHENKO IN THE DRIVING SEAT

Almost two months after the country went to the polls in snap parliamentary elections, members of Ukraine’s two Orange parties finally signed a coalition agreement November 29, paving the way for the formation of a new government this week and a return to the prime minister’s office for Yulia Tymoshenko More

GAS PRICE HIKES EXPECTED IN 2008

Ukraine looks set to absorb renewed price hikes for the natural gas it receives from Russia’s Gazprom in the new year, threatening to fuel further inflation and hit the country’s gas-reliant heavy industries hard Subscribe

PUTIN’S COUP

Russia staged parliamentary elections last weekend as the first step in an elaborate plan to allow Vladimir Putin to remain effectively in control of the country following the end of his second term as president next year. What will this mean for relations with Ukraine? Subscribe

UKRAINIANS WORKING IN RUSSIA: FIGHTING PROPAGANDA AND PREJUDICES

The worsening bilateral relations between Kyiv and Moscow over the past three years have made life increasingly difficult for the millions of Ukrainians living and working in the Russian Federation, but with patience and a little intellect it is still possible to succeed north of the border Subscribe

NEW PARLIAMENT CONVENES AMID ORANGE UNITY CLAIMS AND CONFUSION

Almost two months since Ukraine’s recent snap national election the members of the country’s new parliament finally gathered on November 23 to be sworn in as deputies, but the question of a future coalition government remains very much unresolved More

THE VEILED THREAT OF REGIONS STABILITY

The Party of Regions has long based its election campaigns on promises of stability. However, the spoiling tactics consistently adopted by the party over the past seven months expose the hypocrisy of their stated commitment to stability for the threatening talk it really is More

CONTROVERSY OVER STALIN-ERA PULITZER

Last week, Ukraine kicked off a year of planned events to mark the 75th anniversary of the 1932-33 Holodomor terror famine. With efforts increasing to have the famine recognised internationally as an act of genocide, there were also renewed calls for the Pulitzer Prize committee to posthumously strip Holodomor denier Walter Duranty of his award Subscribe

UKRAINE’S ROYAL BOX

When Ivan Plushch attended a recent Shakhtar Donetsk football match his appearance fuelled a new round of rumours about a possible broad coalition between Our Ukraine rebels and the Party of Regions, reflecting the fact that the VIP enclosure at the Donetsk stadium is fast becoming one of the focuses of Ukrainian political life Subscribe

CRIMEA HIT BY ECOLOGICAL DISASTER

Ukrainian officials were faced with a long term ecological disaster last week when a storm sank or broke up a number of Russian oil tankers, sending thousands of tonnes of heavy fuel oil spilling into the sea in the region of the Kerch Straights, which separates Ukraine from Russia More

NOTHING MUCH WORTH CELEBRATING?

This weekend Kyiv will witness services in honour of the millions who perished in the 1932-33 Holodomor famine. However, the 3rd anniversary of the Orange Revolution looks set to pass by relatively unnoticed. Is there really nothing to celebrate? More

MEMORY POLITICS AND GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

President Yushchenko has seen his popularity tumble since coming to power in 2005, but his efforts to gain recognition for the Holodomor both at home and abroad may well prove one of the enduring legacies of his presidency More

DEADLY TRAFFIC SITUATION INCURS PRESIDENTIAL DISPLEASURE

President Yushchenko last week launched a scathing attack on the heads of Ukraine’s traffic police as statistics highlighted the human cost of the country’s chaotic road network. Will proposals, including a hike in driver fines, prove effective? Subscribe

EUROPEAN OR EURASIAN? UKRAINE’S GEOPOLITICAL POSITION

Ukraine is currently stuck in no man’s land. She no longer fits into Eurasia, but at the same time, Western policy makers, politicians, businessmen and journalists are reluctant to change decades of stereotypes to re-adjust their mental maps of Europe to include Ukraine. It is high time to recognise the country’s European credentials Subscribe

WILL LYTVYN SUPPORT TYMOSHENKO?

More than a month after Ukraine’s early parliamentary elections, the country is still waiting for the real work to begin. However, there are signs that when the curtain finally goes up on the new parliament, a fully functioning government may take centre stage More

THE REAL FRUITS OF PEOPLE POWER

Anyone who remains in any doubt as to the ability of Ukraine’s fledgling democracy to enforce the will of the electorate need only ask Oleksandr Moroz, who will surely confirm that it’s a force to be reckoned with More

BEAUTY IN POLITICS: HELP OR HINDRANCE?

Argentina’s new president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner is the latest high-flying politician to project a stylishly feminine public persona. From France’s Segolene Royal to Ukraine’s Yulia Tymoshenko, more and more women politicians are shunning the power suits and donning designer gear, but is this a sign of self-assurance or a return to old stereotypes? Subscribe

EU ASKS UKRAINE TO HELP COMBAT ILLEGAL MIGRATION

The EU has called on Ukraine to do more to prevent the spread of false travel documents that are being used to enable migrants to pass through the country and enter the European Union illegally Subscribe

PRADA ON STEROIDS

Do you remember the recent film ‘The Devil Wears Prada’ which stars a New York fashion magazine editor Miranda Priestly played by Meryl Streep? Well, eat your heart out Meryl as you pale compared to Yulia Tymoshenko, who is quite simply Prada on steroids Subscribe

DEFENDING UKRAINE’S ISLAND EMPIRE

Ukraine’s claim to a small, sparsely inhabited island beyond the Danube estuary may hold the key to greater energy independence and a wealth of natural resources. The ruthless pursuit of this rocky outcrop illustrates the increasing strategic importance of Black Sea energy resources for countries throughout the region More

RADISSON STRIKES DEAL TO BUILD COMPLEX IN CRIMEA

Crimea’s enormous international tourism potential has long been smothered by political uncertainties and competing local interests, but a deal struck last week to bring a top international hotel chain to the peninsula may mark the beginning of a new era for the Crimean tourist trade More

BATTLE OF THE ORTHODOX CHURCHES

Ukraine’s complex cultural divide has been variously defined as linguistic, religious, geographical and historical in character. As far as the Russian Orthodox Church is concerned, it also depends of which Patriarchate you give your loyalty to Subscribe

POLISH POLL HOLDS PROMISE FOR UKRAINE

For the past few years Poland has been Ukraine’s closest foreign ally and the most vocal advocate of Kyiv’s Euro-Atlantic integration. What will the recent change of government in Warsaw mean to this special relationship? Subscribe

THE EVOLUTION OF TENT TACTICS

The appearance of a self-proclaimed “neutral” tent settlement on Independence Square following on from the September 30 elections is the latest development in the evolution of Kyiv tent tactics, a form of people power protest that has become as Ukrainian as salo and borsch Subscribe

YUSHCHENKO’S RISK OF BECOMING A LAME DUCK

This year’s election’s could mark a crucial watershed in Ukraine’s history. But this depends on Viktor Yushchenko getting it right. And as events have shown since his election, this is where the problem lies Subscribe

UGLY FACE OF EMERGING EXTREMISM

For centuries Ukrainian nationhood was suppressed and even erased. Its renaissance over the past twenty years is to be broadly welcomed, but urgent action needs to be taken to rein in an extremist fringe which has interpreted this renewed sense of identity as license for appalling excesses More

ELECTION BATTLE OVER, TIME FOR ORANGE COALITION TO DELIVER

With court battles now out of the way and a coalition agreement in place, Yulia Tymoshenko stands poised for a return to power. Can her bloc now scale the remaining hurdles, and once in office, what can we expect from a renewed Orange coalition? More

CAN RUSSIA’S PARTY POLITICS SURVIVE PUTIN?

Russia’s progress towards democracy has been thrown into doubt by Vladimir Putin’s authoritarian management techniques. Can it survive his entry into parliament? Subscribe

REFINERY OWNERSHIP BATTLE

As Ukraine prepares to usher in a new parliament, a spat at an oil refinery involving gangs of armed men highlights the energy woes the new government must confront Subscribe

YUSHCHENKO’S PUSH FOR A HOLODOMOR DENIAL LAW

President Yushchenko announced last week his intention to push for laws criminalising the denial of the Ukrainian Holodomor terror famine of the 1930s. This would be the latest step initiated by Yushchenko in addressing the crimes of the Soviet era, but it also threatens to infringe on freedom of speech Subscribe

BORDERING ON ECONOMIC SUCCESS

Lviv is an ancient city with a history as a crossroads of international trade. Can it keep pace with the global economy of the new millennium? More

NEW DEMOCRACY? NO, LAND OF DISORDER!

Russia is approaching what everyone expects will be yet another stage-managed farce of an election. Does that mean Russians are envious of Ukraine’s democratic breakthrough? Not at all, or at least the majority would never admit to it More

COALITION LATEST: DELAYS AND DEALS

Official elections results released last week appeared to confirm the victory of the country’s Orange coalition, but a court challenge from the Communist Party is delaying the final publication of the vote count More

GAS DEATH TOLL CLIMBS TO 23

The death toll from a natural gas explosion that rocked an apartment building in Ukraine’s eastern city of Dnipropetrovsk has reached 23, including seven children, Ukrainian emergency officials conformed October 19, as work to clear the wreckage continued More

BENEFITING FROM EU CROSS-BORDER TRADE

Lviv is at the fulcrum of growing cross-border trade with the EU and stands to benefit as Ukraine’s relations with Brussels improve Subscribe

CASHING IN ON THE TOURISM BOOM

Lviv is fast emerging as the country’s tourism hotspot, reflecting both the growth in popularity across Europe of city break holidays and the rising profile of post-Orange Ukraine Subscribe

FROM LEOPOLIS TO LVIV: EASTERN EUROPE’S BORDERLAND JEWEL

Lviv is a city of paradoxes, famed for its multicultural old Europe roots and yet synonymous with inward-looking contemporary Ukrainian nationalism. However, the tourist potential of its unique bohemian charm coupled with its close proximity to the European Union are combining to give the city a new lease of life Subscribe

PREPARING FOR A EUROPEAN DEBUT

Ukrainians are viewing the Euro 2012 football championships as a chance to transform the nation. The ambitious plans of host city Lviv look set to change the capital of west Ukraine forever, but will they meet with wider European approval? Subscribe

RIGHTING WRONGS OR REWRITING HISTORY? LVIV’S CENTRAL ROLE IN MEMORY POLITICS

The unveiling of a new monument to controversial nationalist idol Stepan Bandera in Lviv is just the latest example of the leading role the city plays in the revisionist trend at the root of Ukraine’s ideological divide Subscribe

WESTERN EVANGELISM TAKES A TURN TOWARD BUSINESS

Ukraine’s religious freedoms make it fertile ground for the world’s evangelical churches, and one American group is now offering business support as part of its efforts to win over potential converts Subscribe

A STEP CLOSER TO ENERGY INDEPENDENCE

Ukraine took a tentative step towards greater energy independence last week when the country signed a new five nation agreement committing them to an oil pipeline bypassing Russia More

WHAT NOW FOR THE DONETSK STRONGMAN?

As Ukraine edges closer to a new Orange coalition, members of the defeated Party of Regions must be wondering how long they can remain loyal to their controversial and nationally divisive leader More

POSITIVE BIRTHRATE FIGURES OFFER SHORT TERM DEMOGRAPHIC RELIEF

Despite the political convulsions of the past three years, population figures released last week for 2007 registered the first positive balance between birth and death rates since independence. Experts caution that this is not the end of the country’s demographic crisis but merely some temporary relief More

ANTICIPATION MOUNTS AS COALITION TALKS CONTINUE

As Ukraine waited for the official results of the September 30 elections to be announced, speculation grew of an imminent unveiling of an Orange coalition headed by Yulia Tymoshenko Subscribe

KYIV’S COSMIC MAYOR PREPARING FOR TAKE OFF?

Even in a world as colourful as the Ukrainian political scene, Kyiv Mayor Leonid Chernovetskiy stands out. His perceived eccentricity has earned him the popular nickname ‘Lyonia Cosmos’, but with a scandal over mass land giveaways threatening to engulf him and few political allies on the horizon, rumours are mounting that the capital’s top official is preparing to sell up and get out Subscribe

STEPPING OUT OF STALIN’S SHADOW

Russia and Ukraine were once considered almost indivisible by many, but the two countries are increasingly distancing themselves from one another. Nowhere is this more apparent than in attitudes towards the atrocities of the Stalin era Subscribe

TIME FOR YUSHCHENKO TO LET HIS HEAD RULE HIS HEART

Yulia Tymoshenko’s spectacular gains in last month’s elections have been interpreted as a sharp rebuke to the Party of Regions. They also represent a biting response from the electorate to the leadership of President Yushchenko, and offer him little choice but to commit himself to a new Orange coalition with Tymoshenko increasingly calling the shots Subscribe

TRUE TEST FOR THE ORANGE REVOLUTION

A new Orange coalition, supported by a parliamentary majority, would be the first time Ukraine has a consolidated Orange power-base Subscribe

RUSSIA THREATENS RENEWED GAS ATTACK

As a new Orange coalition government began to look increasingly likely last week, Russia’s Gazprom announced that unless Ukraine paid huge debts it had accumulated over the last eighteen months it would turn off gas supplies just as it did at the start of 2006 More

NEW NADIR FOR KING COMPROMISER

The President’s call for a broad political compromise among the country’s leading parties may sound admirable to outsiders, but to Ukrainians who have placed their faith in the democratic process it is little short of a kick in the teeth More

ANNIVERSARY WHICH DIVIDES THE NATION

This week will see events marking the 65th anniversary of the founding of the WWII-era Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA). Today Ukraine remains deeply divided about the legacy of this controversial guerrilla force Subscribe

ORANGE COALITION TALKS HIT BY RENEWED CALLS FOR COMPROMISE

Coalition talks continued throughout last week among the parties to have made it into the new parliament, with opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko snubbing President Yushchenko’s surprise appeal for a compromise between her bloc and the Party of Regions Subscribe

INTERNATIONAL AND DOMESTIC REACTIONS

Initial reactions from local and international observers on the preliminary results of Sunday’s vote were cautious but optimistic More

WHAT WE BELIEVE THIS ELECTION RESULT MEANS FOR UKRAINE

Preliminary reports suggest that Sunday’s snap elections passed off without the mass fraud many had predicted. It is now imperative that isolated vote rigging allegations are dealt with and a new coalition formed without delay More

MIXING A NATIONAL METAPHOR

Plans have been announced for major renovation works on Independence Square to take place in 2008. This will be the latest in a series of transformations of the famous Kyiv landmark that have mirrored the growing pains of independent Ukraine More

PINCHUK LAUNCHES EASTONE INTO ORBIT AHEAD OF POSSIBLE IPO

Dnipropetrovsk tycoon Viktor Pinchuk’s formation of a London-based holding company in preparation for an IPO is being widely viewed as a smart move that will see the former Interpipe Holding group go multinational More

2007 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS PRELIMINARY RESULTS

Results stated are preliminary and based on data provided by the Ukrainian Central Election Commission at the time of going to press on Monday, October 1 at 1.00pm. Final results are expected to be announced within ten days. Subscribe

THE GREAT WORKERS’ EXODUS

Over 25% of Ukrainians would be happy to leave the country and settle abroad, according to a national survey conducted in September. Those that do leave are finding life in the West better than ever before with its booming employment markets Subscribe

TYMOSHENKO GAINS GROUND, BUT RESULT TOO CLOSE TO CALL

Despite a stronger than expected showing from Bloc Yulia Tymoshenko on Sunday, margins were tight and the final decision may well end up being made in the courts Subscribe

YES, THEY SAID IT

Ukraine’s fledgling democracy may be maturing, but the country’s politicians appear as keen as ever to buck the trend, as this selection of choice comments from the past two months of campaigning demonstrates Subscribe

PROGRESS ALONG THE ROCKY ROAD TO DEMOCRACY

With less than a week to go before Ukraine goes to the polls, there remains much muttering and resentment that an election is being held at all. There is, however, more cause for optimism than many believe More

ELECTION OBSERVERS DESCEND ON UKRAINE

Ukraine will receive approximately 3,000 international election observers, who will monitor the conduct of the poll across the country and stay on sharp lookout for fraud More

HARVEST TIME FOR FARMERS’ VOTES

Ukrainian politicians are always sure to turn their attention to the agrarian sector when elections are near - albeit temporarily More

RUSSIAN PIPELINE TSAR DEPARTS FOR SOCHI OLYMPICS

As Russia begins preparations for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, a heavyweight appointment from a strategic oil project indicates a strong commitment to the event More

A SECOND CHANCE

Opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko is in her strongest position since losing the premiership in 2005. We find out why she believes voters will back her come September 30 Subscribe

CAMPAIGN BRIEFS

Cows engage in spoiling tactics / New helicopter twist / Billboards attack political ethics / The accidental politician? / Internet hackers enter campaign / Yushchenko’s ad campaign criticised Subscribe

CHAMPIONING STABILITY

Party of Regions leading light Yuriy Miroshnichenko discusses economic policy, relations with the EU and the threats posed to a fair vote on September 30 Subscribe

GIANT SHELL TO MAKE CHORNOBYL SAFE

Last week the deal was struck for the Chornobyl Nuclear Plant to receive a new steel covering to finally seal it off from the outside world Subscribe

PARTY PROMISES V PRACTICAL POLICIES

The election campaign of 2007, perhaps more than any other in Ukraine’s modern history, has seen voters inundated with promises and pledges. But can the rival parties meet their campaign commitments once in power? Subscribe

THE MEN WHO WOULD BE KINGMAKERS

Pollsters are unanimous that the Party of Regions, BYUT and the Our Ukraine-Self-Defence Bloc will take the lion’s share of seats in the coming elections, but any fringe parties that manage to pass the 3% threshold could hold the keys to power in the new parliament Subscribe

UKRAINE’S POP ART PARTY POLITICS

Ukraine’s creative community has had a field day over the past three years with the country engulfed in populist politics, personality cults and the often infantile posturing of its fledgling party political classes Subscribe

CAN UKRAINE AVOID COALITION CHAOS?

The election campaign has yielded neither new faces nor particularly original ideas, but that is no reason to assume that the September 30 ballot will not transform the political landscape More

THE EASTERN FRONT

The Tymoshenko Bloc has gone on the offensive prior to the September 30 parliamentary vote and focused its election campaign on the core Yanukovych-supporting regions of eastern and southern Ukraine. But can this assault on the Party of Regions’ stronghold bridge the great Ukrainian divide? More

CAMPAIGN BRIEFS

Yanukovych calls for record turnout / EU calls on election observers / Minister blasts NATO referendum plan / Accusations of supernatural tricks / Russia caves in to poison pressure Subscribe

ELECTION FAVOURITES PRESENT RIVAL INVESTOR-FRIENDLY PROGRAMMES

Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych and election rival Yulia Tymoshenko both offered up their visions of post-election relations with the international business community last week. Both promised closer relations with foreign investors but the audience saw little evidence of hard policies in the making Subscribe

THE DANGERS OF A DIRTY CAMPAIGN

Administrative abuses, vote-rigging allegations, vandalism and even violence are all threatening to plunge the elections into disrepute. Is Ukraine’s democracy strong enough to defend itself? More

BRINGING IN THE AMERICAN SPIN DOCTORS

After years of election campaigns run by Russian spin doctors, Ukraine’s parliamentary candidates are now increasingly looking to American spin doctors, with all three major front runners in the current election battle employing US campaign advisers Subscribe

REPACKAGING UKRAINE: TACKLING THE IMAGE ISSUE

President Yushchenko announced last week that the country has engaged three international agencies to improve its image abroad. It could prove a Herculean task Subscribe

THE REALITY OF REGIONS’ APPEAL

Viktor Yanukovych and his Party of Regions stand accused of everything from asset-grabbing, vote-rigging and media-muzzling to political poisoning, yet millions are preparing to vote for them in the forthcoming elections. Just what is underpinning the undeniable appeal of this self-styled party of power? Subscribe

VR SESSION HEIGHTENS VOTE FEARS

A legally dubious session of the Verkhovna Rada last week raised doubts over the governing coalition’s commitment to elections and revealed signs that if results do not go its way, Ukraine could be in for more debilitating political deadlock Subscribe

CAN UKRAINE FINALLY COME OF AGE?

Ukraine turned sixteen last month, yet the country seems perpetually trapped in an adolescent circle of argumentative historical posturing. Can Ukraine finally grow up and come to terms with its troubled past? More

A RECORD BREAKING CAMPAIGN?

A grand total of 4,755 candidates from 21 parties have now been registered for the September 30 vote Subscribe

ENERGY SELLOFF SPARKS CRITICISM

Doubts over the government’s ability to fairly conduct privatisations resurfaced last week as critics alleged that Rinat Akhmetov bought an increased share in a state energy firm at below market price Subscribe

FAREWELL TO FOOTBALLING GREATS WHO PUT UKRAINIAN TALENT FIRST

Viktor Prokopenko, the last surviving member of Ukrainian football’s ‘holy trinity’ of top coaches, passed away in August at the age of 62, leaving behind a thriving domestic football scene increasingly dominated by foreign managers and players Subscribe

ORANGE FORCES FACE DIVIDE AND CONQUER TACTICS

The parliamentary election campaign was struck by more spoiling tactics last week as attempts were allegedly made to divide the Our Ukraine Bloc through the use of dubious legal loopholes Subscribe

SAME OLD BOX OF TRICKS?

As Ukraine’s parliamentary campaign reaches its half-way point, there are increasing concerns that some may not want a free and fair election More

THE TIRED FRONT LINE OF DEMOCRACY

Non-participation by the disillusioned masses in the elections could mean that their views end up unrepresented and their enemies in power More

RENAISSANCE OF A NATIVE TONGUE

Ever since the 2004 Orange Revolution the outside world has grown accustomed to viewing Ukraine as a bi-polar country divided more or less equally into Russian and Ukrainian speaking sides. Is this simplified understanding set to become outmoded? Subscribe

FAREWELL, SOVIET SERVICE STANDARDS

International hospitality companies are slowly improving service standards in Ukraine, but let’s face it - there’s a long way to go yet More

WHY RUSSIA TOOK THE LEAD

An OECD report states that Russia’s vast natural resources have fuelled its success, but Ukraine’s more balanced economy could yet win through More

AN END TO IMMUNITY?

The Orange camp’s promise to end politicians’ parliamentary immunity could turn out to be one of the biggest vote-winners in the election More

MISSILE DEFENCE, NATO: UKRAINE’S TOUGH CALL

Putin’s vehement opposition to US missile defence in Europe is seeing Ukraine torn between its desire to grow defence links with the West and its close ties with Russia More

ANOTHER DOOMED ALLIANCE?

As two major members of the Orange camp form an alliance for the upcoming elections, the question now is how Yulia Tymoshenko will react to a new force that is likely to be competing for the same voters Subscribe

GOVERNMENT ADMITS CHEMICAL SPILL MISTAKES

Early statements downplaying the severity of the July 16 phosporous spill lead to criticism of the authorities’ handling of the accident as Transport Minister is called upon to resign Subscribe

PHOSPHOROUS CLOUD HOSPITALISES DOZENS

A toxic cloud of deadly phosphorous spreads across the countryside near Lviv after a train derailment, causing fears of widespread contamination More

CONSPIRACIES, RUMOURS, LEGENDS

As a result of years of government cover-ups and lies under the Soviet regime, Ukrainians are still apt to disbelieve the official version of anything. Bring on the conspiracy theories and urban legends! More

WILL UKRAINE PASS THE ELECTION TEST?

Even if the September elections go off without a hitch, will rushed legislative reforms be enough to ensure another long and painful aftermath? More

BUSINESS AS USUAL

The steady flow of FDI and increased investment by existing players demonstrate that business isn’t worried by the political crisis Subscribe

RUSSIA’S CHESS GAME AND UKRAINE

Russia’s recent flexing of foreign policy muscle, most notably its withdrawal from the CFE arms treaty, have many commentators talking of a new Cold War emerging - so where does this leave Ukraine? Subscribe

THE REPUBLIC OF KYIV

The capital’s prodigious growth and development presents the danger that the rest of Ukraine could be forgotten and left behind More

CRIMEA: A TICKING TIME BOMB?

As unconfirmed reports resurface of terrorist training camps operating in Crimea, the need to resolve long-standing historical conflicts on the peninsula is becoming ever more apparent More

THE KYIV LIONS CLUB: GOING FROM STRENGTH TO STRENGTH

Recent success in fundraising activities by Kyiv’s international business community are a welcome indicator that Ukraine is losing its cynicism towards charitable organisations More

EU RELAXES UKRAINIAN VISA REGIME

Simplified visa requirements for Ukrainians entering the Schengen zone are hoped to come into force by the year end Subscribe

BEYOND THE POVERTY STATISTICS

Official surveys and government data may show that the vast majority of Ukrainians are still far below EU levels of wealth, but increasing evidence on the streets continues to suggest otherwise More

PRESIDENT MAKES RADICAL PROPOSALS

Yushchenko proposes a two-chamber parliament and shorter governmental terms More

A BREAK IN THE STORM CLOUDS

The latest agreement to hold elections on September 30 appears to be holding, but anything could - and probably will - happen More

HIDDEN EPIDEMIC

The spread of HIV/AIDS in Ukraine could have profound economic effects More

TIME TO FACE THE AIDS THREAT

Ukraine’s rate of HIV infection is already the worst in Europe, yet these official statistics could only be the tip of the iceberg as cultural taboos discourage many from testing or taking basic precautions More

Kyiv’s green belt under attack

As the real estate boom continues unabated, Kyiv’s green surroundings are in danger of disappearing forever. Is it necessary when there are so many derelict buildings and vacant plots in built-up areas? More

CRISIS APPROACHES BOILING POINT

Last week saw the ongoing political crisis reach a new level of drama as both sides mobilised troops and the Rada was emptied by a hoax bomb threat. A deal was struck, but how long it will hold is anybody’s guess More

GOODBYE TO DEMOCRACY BUILDING?

After setbacks in Iraq and elsewhere the West is increasingly reluctant to engage in nation building, leaving Ukraine’s pro-democracy forces dangerously More

THE INDETERMINATE GAME OF WAITING

The crisis is over. No, it’s not over. Oh, wait, it’s over again... Expect a few more twists and turns before any elections happen More

PREPARE FOR A DIRTY CAMPAIGN

If you ever wanted to know what ‘political technology’ means then simply watch events unfold over the coming weeks and months and witness underhand campaign tactics at their very worst More

WELCOME TO BANKING 2007

Business Ukraine is proud to present its first special issue focusing on Ukraine's banking industry More

TIME TO FACE RUSSIA’S CHALLENGE

The EU’s lack of resolve at its summit with Russia is the worst possible message it could have sent to the Kremlin. Has it failed to learn that appeasing direct threats to democracy never works? More

WAITING FOR THE CRUCIAL DATE

The warring parties remained locked in negotiations over the election date last week as assassination plot allegations emerged More

Differences don't run that deep

The popular image of Ukraine is increasingly of a country divided, but are these differences really so exceptional and isn't it time to focus on what unites the people of Europe's youngest democracy? More

Europe's new paradigm shift

The upheavals in Ukraine, Turkey and France show that democracy is no panacea to historical and ideological divisions More

A GREAT DEBT STILL UNPAID

Ukraine’s unparalleled sacrifices during World War Two remain largely unacknowledged in the western world More

ACCORD ON ELECTION BUT NO NEW DATE

The President and Prime Minister finally agree on new elections, but no revision of Yushchenko’s June 24 date is yet announced More

SOVIET WAR MEMORIAL CONTROVERSY SPREADS

Nationalist sentiments flare in Russia as NATO and EU back Estonia’s decision to relocate controversial statue More

CHORNOBYL: TWO DECADES ON

The financial and human costs of the world’s worst nuclear accident still remain hard to evaluate More

FLY UKRAINIAN, FLY CHEAPER!

Who needs budget airlines when Ukraine’s internal network is right here? The prices are nice, but don’t expect to be pampered More

PRESIDENT CHOOSES JUNE 24 FOR ELECTIONS

Yushchenko faces impeachment moves as government politicians continue to oppose new elections and street protests wear on More

WHY CHORNOBYL AID MUST CONTINUE

The United Nations believes that economic and community revival is the only way to end the legacy of the Chornobyl disaster More

A GIANT SHELTER FOR LONG-TERM PROTECTION

The Shelter Implementation Plan for Chornobyl will see the construction of a massive mobile shelter designed to enclose the shattered reactor for at least a century Subscribe

INTO HIGH GEAR FOR EURO 2012

Following the recent appointment of Ukraine as co-host of the Euro 2012 football championships, attention is now firmly fixed on the practicalities of preparation and the benefits the event will bring Subscribe

IN FROM THE COLD, UP FOR EURO 2012

Ukraine got its best piece of good news in a long time last week as UEFA announced the surprise decision to award it the 2012 European Football Championships along with Poland More

PRESSURES RISING

The political battle for power shifts focus to the Constitutional Court More

THE ULTIMATE EURO-REMONT

Ukraine’s success with Poland in winning the race to host the Euro 2012 tournament has given the country a great goal to work towards More

WHAT ABOUT RUSSIA?

Not much has thus far been heard from Moscow on Ukraine’s latest political battle. Is this a sign of the new phase in relations the diplomats have been talking up? Subscribe

AND THE WINNER IS...

Peter takes a (very) early shot at predicting both the election date and the winner. So remember, you read it here first More

FIRST MBE FOR BUSINESS IN UKRAINE

British businessman awarded for years of contribution to the plastics recycling industry in Ukraine More

WHY THE STANDOFF WON’T END SOON

The latest political war between the President and Prime Minister is being seen as nothing less than a struggle for control of Ukraine’s strategic direction More

A VERY HIGH-STAKES GAME OF CHICKEN

Yushchenko stands to lose in an election with a weak party and few friends in the Rada. Yanukovych stands to lose by risking his coalition. So why the confrontation now? More

BUSINESS AS USUAL

Revolution? What revolution? Most Ukrainians are too busy getting on with life and business to take the politicians too seriously any more More

STEPS TO RESOLVE A POLITICAL CRISIS

Whether the deadlock is ended by elections or not, failure to respect rule of law and lack of stability remain the underlying problems that need to be solved More

WHAT THE BUSINESS COMMUNITY SAYS

We polled a few of Ukraine’s local and international business people to get their views on the ongoing political turmoil More

OLD HABITS DIE HARD

As the political elite jockey for position to determine who will ultimately control the new Ukraine, switching sides isn’t uncommon More

PRESIDENT FACES NEW ELECTIONS

Growing government faction puts Yushchenko under unprecedented pressure to dissolve the Verkhovna Rada and go to the nation More

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

A privatisation deal hits trouble as allegations of corruption are levelled, Ukraine continues dual EU-Russia foreign policy More

THE ENERGY POWER GAME

The death of Niyazov in Turkmenistan could usher in a new era in the struggle for control of energy supplies which could benefit Ukraine More

THE RETURN OF KINAKH

Yanukovych brings ex-PM Anatoliy Kinakh back into the fold as Minister of Economy More

PRIVATISATION, TAKE THREE

Years wasted on an unworkable voucher system and half-hearted attempts at selloffs make it ever more critical that the government gets it right this time Subscribe

PRIVATISATION, THE CANDIDATES

A quick guide to the companies likely to go under the state hammer Subscribe

A NEW AIRPORT AT LAST?

Following years of dispute over land rights and unused funding the government is finally showing commitment to transform Kyiv’s airport into a true international hub More

HOLIER THAN THOU?

Cases like the Kyivstar wrangle show that while Western business practice may not be perfect, Ukraine has no reason not to improve More

THE LAUNCH OF BUSINESS UKRAINE

Last Thursday (March 15) saw the launch of Business Ukraine, the country’s first English-language weekly magazine, at the Leonardo Business Centre in Kyiv. More

THE WORD FROM LONDON: INVEST

Investors, British government and Ukrainian officials all in buoyant mood at the third Ukraine Investment Summit More

BUSINESS STARTS HERE

The unveiling of Business Ukraine - the new weekly business magazine in English - comes at a very important stage in Ukraine's political and economic development. More

CONSIDER THE ALTERNATIVES

Still believe Ukraine is a problem child? Then consider the good things about the last couple of years - it could be a whole lot worse More
  © New Frontier Media Group Ltd. 21 a Baseyna St., Kyiv 01004, Ukraine