Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Cracks in Putin's kingdom
He can best be characterized by the term "sovok," one of those many-layered pieces of word play in which Russians delight. In this case, it can be summarized as someone who embodies the dark and circumscribed world view of the Soviet man in the street, suspicious of the outside world, resentful, who holds a grudge and remembers a slight. Putin speaks passionately about the "tragedy" of the Soviet Union's collapse, a personally scarring time when he found himself unemployed.
He trusts very few people. Aides say he makes policy on key issues – Georgia, Ukraine, NATO – himself, along with a small circle, and tends to improvise. He shows little interest in the Russian stock market, which has taken a battering since the outbreak of the Georgia crisis, while most of the mega-rich, many of them close associates, have attained their fortune by obeying one rule: Do exactly what Putin says.
In the past, everybody obeyed this rule, and many in the ruling elite were genuinely convinced that he was the right leader for these times. Now, doubts are creeping in, and people are bracing themselves for tense years. The strong man has started to show his weaknesses.
Click here for full story.
Source: Yahoo News.
U.S. accuses Russia of waffling on cease-fire
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The United States on Wednesday criticized Russia for failing to live up to the cease-fire agreement in Georgia and for refusing to remove its military forces.
U.S State Department spokesman Sean McCormack says the Russians "need to get out of Georgia."
"Look, these guys are trying to, at every turn, trying to wiggle out of a commitment that they made and that their president put his name to," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said at his morning briefing. "We've seen it since August and it continues. They need to get out of Georgia and they need to stop finding excuses to do that."
Click here for full story.Source: CNN
EU offers reassurance to Ukraine
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Mr Sarkozy's reassurance comes after rising tensions between Russia and Ukraine over its Crimea region.
Ukraine has also been offered an association agreement with the EU, to be signed next year.
The accord represents cautious support for possible eventual EU membership for Ukraine.
"In the eyes of Europe, [territorial integrity] is absolutely non-negotiable," Mr Sarkozy said in a response to a question from reporters in Paris.
He underlined that the accord left the path for future membership of the 27-member state bloc open, saying: "This association accord does not close any avenues."
Click here for full story.Source BBC On-line
Monday, September 08, 2008
Dmitry Medvedevi a 'political corpse' or a puppet?
| President Medvedev said Russia did not fear calls for its isolation |
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has described his Georgian counterpart as a "political corpse", saying Moscow does not recognise him as president.
Same can be said about this clown of a president, who in reality is a puppet to Lilyput Putin, and has the nerve to come out with such absurd statement.
US gives $1bn to rebuild Georgia
Meanwhile, another country, Nicaragua, whose leftist government fiercely opposes the US, now appears to have become the second nation to recognise the independence of the republics of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
Adrug wielding puppet from Nicaragua and a Alexander Lukashenko, the last dictator in Europe at the head of an outpost of tyranny. We are really impressed now Lillyput Putin. Are there any more takers out there?
Click here to read the following interesting article in BBC on line.
Source: BBC
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Georgia's Human Chain Stronger than Russian Tanks
Click here for complete story.
Source: American Thinker
Sunday, August 31, 2008
Roger Cohen: Loose talk that lost Georgia
So the West should not overplay its hand. Breaking off arms reduction and missile defense talks with Russia is in nobody's interest. Nor are cheap shots like throwing Russia out of an (ever less relevant) G-8.
But nor can the West be cowed. It must shore up the Georgian president, Mikheil Saakashvili, with financial and other support. It must keep the trans-Caspian, Russia-circumventing energy corridor open. It must bolster Ukraine's independence. And, at the NATO foreign ministers' meeting in December, it should replace Bucharest blather with basics: a Membership Action Plan for Georgia and Ukraine.
Click here to view complete article.
Source: International Herald Tribune
Europe must stand up to the Russian bully
A tough reaction by the United States and Europe over Georgia and South Ossetia is necessary not because changing the frontiers in the Caucasus will directly affect our security but because, if Russia sees the West as weak and indifferent, it will be emboldened to repeat its behaviour in Ukraine - and in Crimea, in particular.
Such a crisis would cause massive instability in Europe. Ukraine is a major country with a frontier with the EU. While it is true that parts of Ukraine - including Crimea - have a largely Russian-speaking population, that is far from unique in Europe.
Click here for full story.Source: Telegraph
UK warns over 'Russia aggression'
Mr Brown said: "When Russia has a grievance over an issue such as South Ossetia, it should act multilaterally by consent rather than unilaterally by force."
He went on: "My message to Russia is simple. If you want to be welcome at the top table of organisations such as the G8, OECD and WTO, you must accept that with rights come responsibilities.
Read full story here.
Source: BBCSaturday, August 30, 2008
The return of the Russia the west loves to loathe
Click here for complete article.
Source: Financial Times
The dark shadow of Russia's ambition
When Putin goes on, as he did this week, to state that the whole affair was contrived by the Bush administration, to advance Republican prospects in the coming U.S. election, we get a glimpse of how reckless he has become.
However, the open display of Soviet-style thuggery has had the opposite to the intended effect. European countries are rightly alarmed, and somewhat intimidated, in the expectation that Russia will now play power games with their oil and gas supplies. But the overall effect has been to remind Europe of its military dependence on the United States, and drive wavering parties into closer association with NATO.
Ukraine, the Baltic States, and the various ex-Communist states of Central Europe have spoken out sharply against Russia's aggression, and have accelerated the pace of their integration with the West, in every possible area of endeavour. The Poles and Czechs have finished buying into the U.S. anti-missile shield. Even Belarus, Russia's most obsequious ally in the past, has been shocked into extending diplomatic feelers westward.
Click here for full article.
Source: Ottawa Citizen
Does Russia Care What The West Thinks?
On one level, I don't think Putin cares too much -- he goes by his gut and he considers himself a tough guy. But I think he is going to find it a little more rough going than he thought.Russia, humiliated by a decade of post-Soviet chaos and frustrated by what it perceives as the West's patronizing attitude, has signaled it will no longer shy away from using force to restore its superpower status.
Click here for full article.
Source: Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Friday, August 29, 2008
Ukraine, Russia and European stability
Kudos to David Miliband, who has been spearheading the campaign to settle the Georgia issue, as well as prevent further escalation there as well as in Ukraine and Moldova. We need more courageous people such as Mr. Miliband to get on the band wagon. Here are some of his comments and link to full story below:
Ukraine is a leading example of the benefits that accrue when a country takes charge of its own destiny, and seeks alliances with other countries.
Its choices should not be seen as a threat to Russia or an act of hostility. Equally its independence does demand a new relationship with Russia – a partnership of equals, not the relationship of master and servant.
It is not an act of hostility towards Russia for Europe to support Ukraine, but a positive move towards lasting peace.
Click here for full article.
Source: Guardian
Rewards are easy, punishment is hard
Click here for full story.
Source: Times On-line
Russia's propaganda warfare
A way out for Russia lies in the precise pledge made by Mr Medvedev when he became president of Russia only three months ago - that he would strive to make Russia a nation that truly respects the rule of law and international norms.
Otherwise Russia could be undone by its own myths, and be isolated in the new Cold War that its leaders still say they do not seek.Click here for complete article from BBC On-line.
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Putin accuses U.S. of orchestrating Georgian war
White House spokeswoman Dana Perino blasted Putin's statements, saying they were "patently false."
"To suggest that the United States orchestrated this on behalf of a political candidate just sounds not rational," she said.
On Wednesday a U.S. ship carrying aid docked in Georgia, while Britain's Foreign Secretary David Miliband traveled to the Ukraine, which is worried about Russia's intentions in the region, to offer the UK's support.
Miliband equated Moscow's offensive in Georgia with the Soviet tanks that invaded Czechoslovakia to crush the Prague Spring democratic reforms in 1968, and demanded Russia "change course," AP reported.Living in a world of their own, they (Russia), still think of themselves as a great empire. But, sorry to say, NOT / NYET, wake up and smell the coffee!!! I recommend to send in the doctors to examine this loony tune (Putin).
Click here for full coverage of this story.
Source: CNN
Beginning of the end for Putinism
Click here for the complete article.
Source: New Stateman
'Russia Wants to Change the Map of Europe by Violence'
German commentators on Thursday write that now is the time for a stronger and more coherent response from Europe.
The Financial Times Deutschland writes:
"Any doubt as to Russia's goals in Georgia has vanished into thin air. By recognizing the Georgian territories Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states, against international law, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has made Moscow's intention clear: The Russian government wants to change the map of Europe by violence."
"This war never had much to do with South Ossetia, much less with Georgia. Moscow wants to use this invasion -- which it has prepared for years -- to rebuild its imperium, to expand its control over Europe's energy reserves, and to punish anyone who believes that democracy should bloom along Russia's borders. For Europe this is reason enough to worry."
Click here for full article.Source: Spiegel On-line
Shevardnadze: Russia will be sorry
According to Mr Shevardnadze, he feels the recognition of South Ossetia and Abkhazia by the Russian President Dmitry Medvedev badly thought out. After all Russia has got its own breakaway republics.
"If you recognise Abkhazia and South Ossetia, then you cannot blame a republic like Chechnya for wanting the same. Or Dagestan. Or Tatarstan. They also can be recognized if Abkhazia can be."
Full story can be read here.
Source: Radio Netherlands Worldwide
China rebuffs Russia's moves in Georgia
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang was quoted by state news agency Xinhua as saying "the situation in the region ... should be resolved in dialogue."
Full story here.
Source: MSNBC
Russia faces diplomatic isolation on Georgia
Russia faced diplomatic isolation over its military action against Georgia on Thursday, with its Asian allies failing to offer support and France saying EU leaders were considering imposing sanctions.
Moscow accused the West of heightening tension by a naval build-up in the Black Sea, and said talk of punishing Russia for recognising the independence of two breakaway Georgian regions was the product of a "sick" and "confused" imagination.
The Group of Seven rich nations condemned Moscow's "continued occupation of Georgia" and a group of Asian allies led by China, meeting at a regional summit, failed to follow Russia's lead on independence for two breakaway regions of Georgia.
Click here for full story.
Source: International Herald Tribune
EU threatens sanctions against Russia
"We ... condemn the action of our fellow G8 member. Russia's recognition of the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia violates the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Georgia and is contrary to UN security council resolutions supported by Russia."
In his interview, Miliband rejected the notion that his visit to Ukraine had been provocative. He said he went there because it was important to say to a friendly country that "we support their democratic choices". The foreign secretary reiterated Britain's support for Ukraine's wish to be in Nato and rebuked Russia for treating its neighbours as if they were either "enemies or vassals".
Incredible actions being taken by UK and the other European nations. Time to isolate Russia and let it choke on its own fecus.
Complete story here.
Source: Gaurdian
The West pledges its support for Ukraine - up to a point
Mr Miliband offered strong words of support during his talks in Kiev, but did not stray beyond EU and Nato policy of offering Ukraine eventual membership of both organisations.
"My visit is designed to send a simple message," he told an audience of students and diplomats gathered at Kiev's oldest university. "We have not forgotten our commitments to you. Nor shall we do so." He went on: "The Russian President [Dimitri Medvedev] says he is not afraid of a new Cold War. We don't want one. He has a big responsibility not to start one."
Let us hope?
Click here for full story.
Source: The Independent
West tells Russia to keep out of Ukraine
Viktor Yushchenko, Ukraine’s pro-west president, highlighted the potential for conflict by questioning the agreement under which Russia uses the Ukrainian port of Sevastopol, in Crimea, for its Black Sea fleet. He said Russia’s actions were “a threat to everyone, not just for one country”.
His remarks were echoed by Mikheil Saakashvili, Georgian president. In Thursday’s Financial Times, Mr Saakashvili writes: “This story is no longer about my small country, but the west’s ability to stand its ground to defend a principled approach to international security.”
Meanwhile, the US avoided a potential clash with Russia by diverting a navy ship carrying aid to the Georgian-controlled Batumi instead of the Moscow-controlled Georgian port of Poti.
Click here for full article.
Source: The Financial Times
Russia's Delusion
IN TIME WITH Russia's unilateral recognition of the independence of the two Georgian provinces it invaded this month, President Dmitry Medvedev issued a statement, penned an op-ed and granted an unusual flurry of interviews. His intent was to justify Moscow's latest provocation of the West, which has been united in condemnation -- as was demonstrated yesterday by a statement by the Group of Seven industrial nations. Instead Mr. Medvedev merely revealed the dangerously arrogant and reckless mood that seems to have overtaken the Kremlin in recent weeks.
Click here for full story.
Source: Washington Post
Standing up to the Russian bully
The invasion of Georgia is the first significant step towards restoring part of the old hegemony. Disagreement over the Sevastopol base could provide the pretext for the next; thus Mr Miliband's visit to Kiev yesterday.
His presence in the Ukrainian capital was symbolically important and his analysis of the situation forthright. When it came to sanctions, however, he had little to suggest beyond lessening energy dependency on Russia.
Once again, let us rehearse the minimal steps the West should take to counter Kremlin bullying: expulsion from the G8; freezing consultation within the EU Partnership and Cooperation Agreement and the Nato-Russia Council; an invitation to Georgia and Ukraine by the alliance to join its Membership Action Plan; and the blocking of Russia's WTO membership.
Click here for full article
Source: The Telegraph
Like any bully, Russia can be faced down. Let's do it sooner rather than later
Here is a preview:
Ukraine is a free country with a lively media where nobody lives in fear of the midnight knock on the door, forcible incarceration in psychiatric hospitals or the arbitrary confiscation of property. Such things are the hallmarks of the ex-KGB regime in Russia.
Source: The Daily Online
"International outlaw"
Full story here.
Source; BBC
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Russia Is Dangerous But Weak
Here is an interesting retrospective on this in the Wall Street Journal.
Monday, August 25, 2008
New mouthpieces for tyrany
Source: Times On-line
Friday, August 22, 2008
Putin wins gold medal for bullying
We are certainly getting great coverage around the globe and the real truth about Liliput Putin the bully. Only the Moskali and their press seem to be licking the behinds of their incompetent leaders. Being scared in being sent to the gulag.
It is enough to make even the cynical shake their heads in disbelief. Europe's approach is weak and will cause bigger problems. So Putin wins the gold medal in his favourite event - bullying his smaller neighbours.
Click here for full article.
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Is Dima Medvedev a Liar, or Simply an Idiot?
There are only two explanations for Russian troops "digging in" and driving over police cars blockading the major commercial port and taking prisoners when the "president" of Russia told the world they wouldn't:
(a) the "president " was lying,
(b) the "president" isn't really in charge, he only thinks he is - in other words, he's one of the greatest morons of world history.
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Way to go Kyiv !!!!
Here is the link to the results.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Protecting Russian intrerests $$$$$$$
Today's Russian leaders, despite the paranoia learned in KGB training, have far more profound relationships with Western institutions, not only the Group of Eight and the Council of Europe but also with the Western banks and companies that invest their money and manage their property. Time to put a kybosh on this wouldn't you say?
Read following article by Anne Applebaum in the Washington Post.
Also, the West needs to respond to Russia's aggression in a clear and determined manner. That doesn't mean with force as we are witnessing from Russia. But the West, particularly the U.S., should continue to mobilize the international community to condemn Russia's behavior.
Ukraine risks wrath of Russia as Yushchenko sides with the West
Russia has never completely reconciled itself to Ukraine's independence which Moscow viewed as an affront to the vision nurtured by Vladimir Putin, of Russia restored to its former might. Ukraine humiliated Mr Putin in 2004 when millions joined in demonstrations that became known as the Orange Revolution to overturn the results of a presidential election rigged in favor of a pro-Moscow candidate.
Click here for full story.
Courtesy: The Independent
Looney ville aka: Moskovska propaganda
"I think that there should be no mercy for that. We will do our best not to let this crime go unpunished."
Is he talking about himself in such a manner?
Also Sergei Lavrov accused Nato of being "unobjective and biased".
"It appears to me that Nato is trying to portray the aggressor as the victim, to whitewash a criminal regime and to save a failing regime," he said.
These cookoos are really off the wall. First they play the role of GOD, saying what is right and whom it is right to punish.
Click here for full story.
Meanwhile, we can base our own opinions of what is really going on in Georgia.
Finally, Russia’s accusations of Georgia committing “genocide” in South Ossetia to justify invasion? Turned out to be a big fat lie:
Thanks to Ukrainian Canadian Andrew and Paulette at Nash Holos
Source: BBC
Monday, August 18, 2008
Shoulder to shoulder against Russia
To do so would be to repeat Chamberlain's mistake.
Read full story here.
Source: The Guardian
Sunday, August 17, 2008
Boot Russia out of the G8
Canada, hardly a world power, should do three things immediately: Prohibit any more Russians or Russian entities from acquiring any more Canadian corporations or assets; oppose its WTO membership and join the movement to boot Russia out of the G8.
Click here for full story.
Source: National Post
Ukraine torments Russia with show of solidarity
Click here for full story.
Source: Times On-line
Friday, August 15, 2008
Your time is running out Liliput Putin
But, today people can see through this smoke screen you keep spewing. This is not the 1950's Lilyput Putin, you are certainly no Stalin, even though you deep down in your little mind you might think so ( and little we mean very literarily).
Today, we have the freedom of speech and the free use of the Internet. So, whatever you and your cronies might think you might be getting away with today, the whole free world sees what a bunch of stumbling, bumbling losers you are. Your time is running out.................
Slava Hrusiyi (Georgia)
Slava Ukraini (Ukraine)
"Cold-blooded killers" and "barbarians"
To read more about this click here.
Thursday, August 14, 2008
Ukraine snubs Moscow on port
Being not serious is something Russia must know quite well. After watching former president Gorbachev on Lary King live, it certainly shows how desperate the present corrupt regime is. Having to resort to Gorby's take on what is happening in Geoergia is really resorting to desperate. measures. After the interview Larry King had Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili on and in 10 minute interview he laid out the true picture of what is happening in Georgia. How liliput Putin and his KGB henchmen are destroying and pillaging Georgia.
I think Russia needs to resurrect some of the older guards from their graves, maybe Stalin can come and explain to Larry how he starved 10 million Ukrainian during the Ukrainian Holodomor 1932-1933. What a farce from the Russians.
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Liliput Putin and Fifi Lavrov
Article from BBC On-line
I would definitely chose the VIRTUAL PROJECT!!!! Virtual is the wave of the future, meanwhile Russia still lives in the past and can't face the reality of the future passing them by. Say it ain't so Liliput Putin?
Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Canada's Harper Condemns Russian Military Offensive in Georgia
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper condemned Russia`s military offensive in Georgia and called on the country to return its troops to positions held before the conflict.
``In escalating the conflict through its attacks on Georgian towns and cities outside South Ossetia, Russia has ceased to act as a peacekeeper,`` Harper said in an e-mailed statement.
Russia sent tanks, troops and warplanes into Georgia on Aug. 8 in what it said was a response to a Georgian offensive on South Ossetia, which won de facto independence from Georgia after a war in the early 1990s. Russia had peacekeeping forces in the breakaway province.
Russian forces crossed into Georgia`s heartland for the first time yesterday and took several towns and a military base, drawing criticism from U.S. President George W. Bush.
``It is imperative that Russia respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia,`` Harper said.
Story courtesy: Bloomberg
US has only tough talk for Russia
He said, "Russia has invaded a sovereign neighboring state and threatens a democratic government elected by its people," "Such an action is unacceptable in the 21st century."
Unfortunately Russia still has not awakened up to the realities of 21st century, Putin and his despots are still living in their glory days of Soviet Union, which in reality has collapsed, last time I checked the world map. Wake up and smell the coffee comrades!!!!
To read more click here Source; BBC
Also, even though there has been an announcement to a cease fire, it looks like Russia is still doing what it wants.
Attacks continuing despite Russia halt claim (Source: CNN)
URGENT: VOTE TO HELP GEORGIA
PLEASE SIGN THIS ON-LINE PETITION TO HELP STOP RUSSIAN MILITARY
AGGRESSION AGAINST INDEPENDENT GEORGIA!
http://www.petitiononline.com/557799/
Sunday, August 10, 2008
Russia Georgia fighting...U.S., Ukraine warn Russia
Source: http://www.kxmc.com/News/263154.asp
Saturday, August 09, 2008
Georgia declares state of war with Russia
Doesn't all this sound familiar? I guess daddy Stalin must be looking on proudly onto his
Friday, August 08, 2008
Solzhenitsyn's tarnished legacy
Never mind that, whatever division he worked in, Putin served in the same institution that hounded dissidents and sent people to the gulag; or that, after his ascent to power, he moved to restore the KGB and its predecessors to a place of honor in Russian history and society.
Click here for full article.
Thursday, August 07, 2008
Alexander Solzhenitsyn
I also found this quite relevent in one of my favorite blogging sites, Cyber Cossack.
To end this piece here is Roman Sebyn's take on Solzhenitsyn denial of Ukrainian Holodomor.
Rest in piece black bird.....
Saturday, August 02, 2008
Auschwitz survivor to be honoured
For most people, luck is just an idea. The hope that things might go their way and the fear that something bad could happen to them with no rhyme or reason.
Stefan Petelycky wears a symbol of his luck on his arm, a tattoo emblazoned with the numbers 154922. The number was branded on him when he was taken to Auschwitz when he was only 20 years old.
“I’m lucky, I think God needs me,” Petelycky said
To read full story click here.Monday, July 28, 2008
SBU publicizes list of Soviet officials who engineered Holodomor Genocide
Holodomor and repression in Ukraine
The Security Service of Ukraine has released on its website the first
list of high-ranking Soviet state and party officials and NKVD
henchmen who perpetrated and executed the man-made famine and
repression in 1932-1933 in Ukraine. The list also includes documents
signed by Holodomor perpetrators that served as organizational and
legal base for repression, SBU July 23 press service report says.
The documents taken from SBU archives convincingly prove that the
Famine of 1932-1933 was engineered by the criminal totalitarian
Communist regime. Now these hitherto classified documents have been
made available to the Ukrainian public.
Visitors to the SBU site can now not only acquaint themselves with
the list of Soviet officials but also read the documents signed by
them, protocols of Politburo sessions, secret instructions to party
members, the text of the infamous law imposing cruel punishment for
the theft of grain by famine-stricken peasants and death statistics
by law-enforcement bodies.
The publication is the start of a new project by the SBU to present
to the public classified documents from Soviet archives. The SBU
urges the Ukrainian Institute of National Memory, the State Committee
on Archives, experts in regional state archives, Holodomor
researchers to join the project with the purpose of evaluating the
role of organizers and executors of the Famine and repression to
bring them to account.
Comment by ZIK
SBU says it has made public all available archive materials about the
Famine in 1932-1933. For the first time, SBU opened its archives in
2006, notably, the Soviet documents on Holodomor. These documents
have been included in "Declassified Memory. 1932-1933 Holodomor in
Ukraine as represented by NKVD documents,"
Kyiv, 2007. Its electronic version is available on the SBU site.
http://ssu.gov.ua/sbu/control/uk/publish/article?art_id=80420&cat_id=39574
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
In the light of historical truth
Of course, documented facts that expose a terrible tragedy like the Holodomor do not ease the pangs of conscience that are experienced by normal individuals once they become aware of what Stalin’s band of murderers did to Ukraine. However, it is the sacred duty of each one of us to feel (at least partially) the pain of that time.
Click here for full story fron Den news.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
Vlad and the spinmeister: The ABC’s of Holodomor denial
Click here for full article from Kyiv Post about - Vlad and the spinmeister: The ABC's of Holodomor denial.
Tuesday, July 15, 2008
The famine in Ukraine through the eyes of foreign diplomats
Click here to view full story.
Sunday, July 13, 2008
U.N. denies Ukraine's genocide claim
Russian U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin lobbied the General Assembly against opening discussions on Ukraine's claim that the catastrophic 1932-33 famine, which historians blame on Josef Stalin's failed efforts at collectivization, amounted to genocide.
The U.N.'s Parliamentary Assembly of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe went so far as to adopt a resolution condemning the famine, but fell short of recognizing it as an act of genocide, Churkin said.
"We believe it would be a disservice to the memories of hundreds of thousands of people who died of hunger in other countries and regions of the former Soviet Union to raise this issue at the U.N., in relation to only one of the regions that suffered," he told the Russian news service RIA Novosti.
Churkin said it wasn't only Ukraine that starved in what he called "a tragic page in the shared history of the peoples of the Soviet Union," but also Belarus, the Volga area, the Black Sea area, the Don area and the North Caucasus.
Source:UPI
Ukraine to investigate whether devastating 1932-33 Soviet-era famine was genocide
The probe is likely to anger neighboring Russia, which insists the famine was not genocide because Russians and other ethnic groups also suffered.
Verstyuk said the investigation is not aimed at extracting any compensation from Russia, the Soviet Union's legal successor.
"We are not putting forward any material or moral claims. What matters for us is to condemn Stalin's regime and those who surrounded him," Verstyuk said.
Estimates of the number of people who perished differ wildly. Yushchenko estimates up to 10 million Ukrainians died, while Stanislav Kulchitsky, a Ukrainian historian, believes 3.5 million perished.
Click here to view full article published in Kyiv Post
Thursday, July 10, 2008
Annals of Neo-Soviet "Education" -- Denying Holodomor
A May 15th story in the Moscow Times about the repugnant parade of Soviet military hardware through Red Square a few days earlier stated:
After the parade, Medvedev hosted a champagne reception at the Kremlin for veterans. Medvedev has also sent out congratulatory telegrams to the leaders of other former Soviet republics. In his note to Ukrainian President Victor Yushchenko, Medvedev warned him against any attempt to justify the Nazi crimes and "question the liberating mission of the Soviet Army," the Kremlin said. Many in Ukraine sided with Nazi Germany during the war, and who fought against the Soviets have been recognized and praised Ukrainian veteransunder Yushchenko. Putin, for his part, sent out congratulations to the prime ministers of the same countries, and in his telegram to Tbilisi he wished peace and well-being to the Georgian people. Relations with Georgia recently sank to a new low after Moscow increased the number of peacekeepers in Georgia's breakaway republic of Abkhazia, sparking fears of an armed conflict.
Click here for full article from Publius Pundit.
Ukraine is Russia’s best hope for geopolitical and cultural survival
Click here to view full story from Kyiv Post website.
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
The truth about the Ukrainian genocide
This year marks the 75th anniversary of the Great Famine in Ukraine, during which up to 10-million Ukrainians perished. The United States and others have recognized that it amounted to genocide. The Russian Duma, however, maintains the famine was only an unfortunate result of Soviet collectivization.
What actually happened in Ukraine in 1932-33? And did it really amount to genocide?
Full article from the National Post can be viewed here.
Tuesday, July 08, 2008
Britain and Russia: All is still not well
The conclusion to be drawn from these latest comments is that Britain believes that the Russian security service the FSB was operating largely independently, but in a permissive environment in which the Kremlin signalled that action against critics was allowed.
The Russian parliament even passed a law making it legal to carry out assassinations abroad.
You can read the full story here.
Saturday, July 05, 2008
OSCE passes resolution on 1932-33 famine in Ukraine
Members of parliament from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's 56 member states are currently meeting in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, for their annual session.
At its spring session in April, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) endorsed a move by a number of Ukrainian politicians that the famine or the Holodomor be considered an act of genocide against Ukrainians by the Soviet authorities.
Russia's delegation, however, objected to the use of such language.
In late 2006 Ukraine's parliament recognized the Stalin-era famine as an act of genocide, but Moscow has consistently rejected Ukraine's interpretation of the Holodomor.
Estimates vary widely as to the number of deaths in Ukraine in the early 1930s caused by the forced collectivization, along with the devastating purges of the Ukrainian intelligentsia, religious leaders and politicians under Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. Some sources cite figures of over 7 million. ASTANA, July 3 (RIA Novosti) -- The OSCE Parliamentary Assembly adopted a resolution on Thursday condemning the 1932-33 famine in Ukraine but falling short of recognizing it as an act of genocide.
Members of parliament from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe's 56 member states are currently meeting in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, for their annual session.
At its spring session in April, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) endorsed a move by a number of Ukrainian politicians that the famine or the Holodomor be considered an act of genocide against Ukrainians by the Soviet authorities.
Russia's delegation, however, objected to the use of such language.
In late 2006 Ukraine's parliament recognized the Stalin-era famine as an act of genocide, but Moscow has consistently rejected Ukraine's interpretation of the Holodomor.
Estimates vary widely as to the number of deaths in Ukraine in the early 1930s caused by the forced collectivization, along with the devastating purges of the Ukrainian intelligentsia, religious leaders and politicians under Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin. Some sources cite figures of over 7 million.
Thursday, July 03, 2008
Why the Kremlin Is So Scared of Ukraine
Read full story from Moscow Times here.
Tuesday, July 01, 2008
Ukraine to erect statue of wartime nationalist leader
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The city's mayor, Bohdan Shyba, has instructed the local land department to allocate a plot for the monument by July 10.
Bandera was one of the leaders of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) which fought with the Soviet Army during the World War II. Following the invasion of German troops in the summer of 1941, Bandera called on Ukrainians "to help the German army in the fight against Moscow and Bolshevism."
Russia and Ukraine have been involved in a series of disputes concerning their common history.
Ukraine has decided to celebrate next year the 350th anniversary of the 1659 Battle of Konotop, in which the Ukrainian army of Ivan Vyhovsky and his Polish allies defeated Russian forces.
Russia's Foreign Ministry said certain political forces in Ukraine were trying to "find in the ... Russian-Ukrainian common history events and characters memorable only for the fact that they were acting against Moscow, Russia and Russians."
The historical sparring has developed into an unofficial war of monuments. In October 2007, the western Ukrainian city of Lvov inaugurated a statue of Stepan Bandera and adopted a resolution establishing the "Award of Stepan Bandera," while a sculpture of Catherine the Great was erected in the Crimean port of Sevastopol as part of its 225th anniversary celebrations this June.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Putin's New Evil Empire
wrong. They flinched when Ronald Reagan called the Soviet bloc,
rightly, the "evil empire". Sometimes that fastidiousness was simply
based on wilful ignorance. Reports of Stalin's terror, the Gulag,
persecution of dissidents or the bullying of the captive nations were
dismissed as tendentious or inaccurate. More often it was based on a
feeling that the West's own shortcomings were so appalling that we
were in no position to judge anyone else. Amid the ruins of communism
in Czechoslovakia in late 1989, I sat through an excruciating dinner
with my then foreign editor where I explained that the Czechs wanted
to become a "normal country". He couldn't share my enthusiasm. "What's
`normal' about Britain?", he asked scornfully — a country where
mounted police charged striking miners, where a quarter of the
population lived in poverty, and where you could be locked up for a
decade just for having an Irish surname.
Click here for full article by EDWARD LUCAS
From the new Standpoint magazine, which has
just launched. www.standpointmag.
Tuesday, June 24, 2008
The importance of heroes for our national heritage
Medvedev Hits Out at Ukraine
what he described as attempts to rewrite wartime history --- an attack
the Kremlin said was aimed at Ukraine and the three Baltic states.
I think the Soviet propaganda machine did a good job re-writing history themselves and now
comes the time where all their lies are being exposed. Like little children they are crying about the Holodomor which the Soviets who also lied for many years about ever happening are now saying that not only Ukrainians suffered during this tragic time.
Just like they seem to think Kyiv Rus is part of their Soviet history, when anyone with any historical knowledge can conclude Moscovy only came to any existence in 16th-17 century.
Monday, June 23, 2008
The Ukrainian 'genocide by starvation'
Click here to view full story by Times On-line UK.
Friday, June 20, 2008
The main point
Click here for full story from The Day, with historian Stanislav Kulchytsky and his Russian counterpart Viktor Kondrashin on the Holodomor.
Gareth Jones back in Ukraine
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Kyiv Chicken Festival
This is due to the fact that there has been a reduction of eggs in and around Kyiv. Where have all the chickies gone????
My deepest apologiesfor this BIG goof up.
Ukraine's largest chicken producers Nasha Ryabab holding about 45% of the market and under the control of Ihor Kolomoysky's Pryvat group have decide to enlist Tartak, Haytana and other musicians to pump their product. While I can't remember the exact date of the festival... I really don't think it will be as well attended as the many different festivals.
Hat tip to uaMuzic and not ruMuzic ~~~~ just having a little fun Vasyl! :-)))
P.S. Here is another great track with Tartak & Huliaygorod -
Oy uchora v Kumi (Kofein RMX)
POMAH
Ivanov Warns Kiev Over NATO! Hooohoooohooohooo...
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Lithuanian ban on Soviet symbols
Click here for full story. Way to go Lithuania!!!! And of course while Soviet propagandists were writing and still keep writing their version of history, they cry foul on the hard truth.
Moscow's official interpretation of history is that Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia were liberated from Nazi Germany by, then voluntarily joined, the Soviet Union. Gag me with a spoon...........
Nash Holos: Nash Holos Ukrainian Language School Final Exam
50 multiple choice questions based on the lessons in the CDs, so if you've been paying attention throughout the year, there is no reason you wouldn't ace the exam! (Although, if you haven't but are the type that likes a challenge, you should take it anyway.)
Monday, June 16, 2008
The study of genocide
ROMAN SERBYN
Département d'histoire, Université du Québec à Montréal
June 14, 2008
The Toronto District School Board curriculum on genocide is objectionable not by what it includes in the course of study but by what it leaves out (High-School Course On Genocide Draws Protests - Toronto edition, June 13). Forced starvation has been a weapon in the genocidal extermination of peoples since time immemorial. It was used in time of war to bring impregnable cities to their knees, and in time of peace to destroy undesirable minorities. To leave the Holodomor, the Ukrainian famine of 1932-33, out of the curriculum makes no pedagogical sense.
The UN Convention on Genocide describes various mechanisms of genocide. One of them is "forcibly transferring children of the group to another group." For decades, Canada perpetuated this slow genocidal destruction against our "first nations." Surely, this aspect of our history must also be included in any meaningful teaching about genocide.
More about this exclusion can be seen here.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
No future for Soviet symbols in Ukraine
Message to Moscow
Tuesday, June 10, 2008
Russia And Ukraine Clash Over 350-Year-Old Battle
Oh, what else is new today in Russia. It is hard for the moskalyi to accept the fact that Ukraine does have it's own history and as well won it's share of battles, Konotop being one of them. We can name other's, but this will come in future postings. For now feel free to read the following article on Russia's dismay.
The Konotop battle was with a few exceptions an abandoned topic in Russian Imperial and in Soviet historiography. This attitude towards this event is explained by the fact that it dispelled some Russian propaganda positions about the unity of East Slavs, in particular the ones about "eternal friendship of Russian and Ukrainian peoples" and about "natural desire of Ukrainians for union with Russia". For all the skill and the bravery of the Cossacks — especially those defending Konotop — it still remains a bitter victory. A victory that did not have any significant impact on the course of Ukrainian history, where fratricidal war of the Ruin and personal ambitions of treacherous hetmans prevailed. As such, the Konotop battle remains a classic example of the battle won and a war lost.
Monday, June 09, 2008
Soviet Union helped Nazi Germany instigate the horrors of the holocaust
President visited Solovetsky Monastery
Ex-KGB Thugs Ruining Russian Legacy
"The former KGB thugs who now control the country are stomping Russia’s last historical chance into the dirt. They are doing everything to show the world that Russia is led not by civilized, respected leaders, but by a street gang from Lubyanskaya Ploshchad."
Click here to view the article.
Saturday, June 07, 2008
Another Good way of de-russifying Ukraine
Kateryna Onyschuk from Lviv who translated the novel said that while working on Tolkien’s book she dreamt of elves and gnomes, helping her come up with the best translations.
http://www.kyivpost.com/guide/general/29052/
Way to go Kateryna!!!
2:0 for the good guys/gals..... Kateryna's I mean!
President`s wife sues member of parliament
Kateryna Yushchenko, wife of President of Ukraine Victor Yushchenko, will sue member of parliament Leonid Hrach (the Communist Party faction) for his slanderous statements about the President’s family.
Click here to view article.
Also very interesting article here, time to turn the the table around, I would say!!!!
Marsha Singh - British Labour MP Tables Motion to Recognize Holodomor as Genocide
*MP calls for genocide ruling*
Telegraph & Argus
By Anika Bourley
display.var.2322162.0.mp_calls_for_genocide_ruling.php
A Bradford MP is calling for the Ukrainian famine of 1933
to be officially recognised as an act of genocide.
Marsha Singh, the Labour MP for Bradford West, has tabled
an early day motion in the House of Commons and is hoping
to get the backing of fellow MPs.
There is no international consensus among scholars or
politicians on whether the Soviet policies that caused the
famine fall under the legal definition of genocide.
Mr Singh said: "The Holodomor was an appalling act of
inhumanity and immense tragedy which lead to the death
by starvation of seven million Ukrainians.
it as an act of genocide.
Chernihiv pays tribute to James Mace
I post this article in your memory. My mom was born in Chernihiv and survived the Holodomor, a child, four years old who was one of the lucky ones to come out of this alive. I remember her talking about this horrific happening and for me it was not conceivable that such a thing could really happen. And here you come into the region of my mother's birth and people honor your memory and we honor the memory of the 10 million who died.
Thursday, June 05, 2008
I was chosen by your dead - Legacy of the Famine: Ukraine as a postgenocidal society
"Ukrainian history of the period, along with documents,
speeches, and editorials carried literally every day by the
official press of Soviet Ukraine, the main features of the Soviet
official policy toward Ukraine became completely clear to me.
At this point a digression is in order. Why should I, a born and
bred American, take up such a topic? What did I need it for? I
have been asked this question very often and I have often
been tempted to ask in turn: Why should millions of Russians,
Jews, Armenians, and Ukrainians travel across the ocean to
that faraway godforsaken country, my America? I did it
because Ukrainian Americans required such research, and
fate decreed that the victims chose me. Just as one cannot
study the Holocaust without becoming half Jewish in spirit, one
cannot study the Famine and not become at least half
Ukrainian. I have spent too many years for Ukraine not to have
become the greater part of my life. After all, Martin Luther said,
"Here I stand, I can do no other."
Click here for full article.
Mace died in Kyiv at age 52. He is survived by his wife, Natalia Dziubenko-Mace, one son from a previous marriage, William, and two adult stepchildren.
The Order of Yaroslav Mudry, 2nd Class was awarded posthumously to Mace by President Viktor Yushchenko, in 2005. A monument in his memory will be established in Kiev in 2008.
World forgets, Canada remembers
It is certainly refreshing to see Canada's media outlet, Toronto Sun and in particular, Eric Margolis exposing the truth about soviet propaganda and the Holodomor issue.
Click here to read Eric's full article.
Also few outstanding pieces by Eric Margolis:
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
Ukraine must pursue perpetrators of Holodomor
Only as the Soviet Empire exfoliated could the truth about the Holodomor be addressed openly. By 1991, however, many survivors had died. And, to this very day, some in post-Soviet Ukraine defend the Soviet past, so obfuscating their own complicity in the many crimes of Communism.
Nevertheless, efforts have been made to recover Ukraine's true historical memory. The fourth Saturday of every November is now a national day of mourning in Ukraine. And President Viktor Yushchenko's government has sought international support for the recognition of the Holodomor as genocide, a campaign furthered during his recent Canadian visit when our Parliament passed a bill doing just that.
This is all good but also off-point. For Kyiv is ignoring a far more pressing duty. Just as Holodomor victims remain alive, so do some of the perpetrators. If Ukraine allows those real liars to pass away unpunished, then all of the above is nothing but an unforgivable hoax, a falsehood that could never be forgiven.
Click here for full story.
World forgets, Canada remembers
Canada's planned recognition of the 1932-1933 genocide, or Holdomor, in Ukraine is very significant, even if long overdue. It was also apropos for this week's visit of Ukraine's President Viktor Yushchenko, who remains that troubled nation's best hope for democracy and continued independence.
Ottawa's decision was motivated as much by ethnic politics as historic justice, but Prime Minister Stephen Harper's government deserves kudos for doing the right thing.
For eight decades, the greatest mass murder in modern history has been shamefully covered up or ignored. I was shocked to receive letters from young Ukrainian-Canadians saying they had known nothing about the Holdomor until reading about it in my columns. Hopefully, more now will know.
Click here for full story by Eric Margolis, Toronto Sun