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A revealing commentary by a German newspaper
The price of Ukrainian democracy
By Peter Schwarz
31 December 2004
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Triumph for democracy was the title of a recent
commentary in the German Süddeutsche Zeitung newspaper
dealing with the results of the Ukrainian presidential elections.
The author of the piece, Thomas Urban, is the newspapers
European specialist. For weeks he has been describing the Orange
opposition in Kiev in glowing and uncritical reports. But in his
recent comment, written in a flush of enthusiasm, he says more
about the character of Ukrainian democracy than perhaps he intended.
Urban writes: One thing that Yushchenko will surely not
be able to carry out: to quickly break the monopolies of the industrial
oligarchs. He will have to proceed carefully, but the chances
of merging them in the medium term into a free-market economy
are not so bad. After all, the oligarchs who scrambled together
fortunes in the 90s, partially with criminal methods, are
themselves interested in legal securityand in prestige.
They also want to be recognised internationally as part of the
Ukrainian elite.... The wild mafia capitalism wants to provide
itself with an air of respectabilityand this fits quite
well into the program for the democratisation of the country.
The fact that most oligarchs, should they become good taxpayers,
will get off lightlybecause it is hardly possible to prove
their criminal activitywill be a price that has to be paid
for a new start.
This, therefore, is Ukrainian democracy: legal security for
the oligarchs who assembled their fortunes with criminal methods,
and an air of respectability for wild mafia capitalism. For once,
we agree with Urban. This is, in fact, the direction being taken
by the democracy of Viktor Yushchenko and Julia Timoschenko.
Democracy means popular rule. Genuine democracy presupposes
that broad layers of the population can satisfy their elementary
interests not only in a formal sense but in real life. The observance
of certain formalities in the course of casting votes (the observance
of which was also very doubtful during the last repeated election)
is not sufficient to satisfy the demands of genuine democracy.
As long as social wealth is controlled by a tiny, fabulously rich
upper layer, while the vast majority must get by with a monthly
income of between 30 and 100 euros, there can be no real democracy.
The incompatibility of democracy and social inequality has
been evident all over the world for the past 20 yearsnot
least in the US, where a causal connection exists between the
social polarisation of society and the attacks on basic democratic
rights undertaken by the Bush administration. Elections have been
transformed into an industry swallowing billions of dollars aimed
at systematically manipulating public opinion and excluding mention
of any serious opposition to the dominant elite. Freedom of the
press has degenerated into freedom for financially powerful companies
to possess and control the media as they desire. In fact, the
crude methods used by the Ukrainian government to manipulate its
media appear positively primitive compared to the media power
of a Rupert Murdoch or a Silvio Berlusconi.
The first condition for the introduction of democratic relations
worthy of the name is precisely what Urban categorically rules
out. It would consist of breaking the monopolies of the industrial
and finance oligarchs. In addition, the illegitimately acquired
fortunes would have to be confiscated and made available for social
purposesold-age pensions, education, health care, securing
jobs and the development of the countrys infrastructure.
Such a perspective would overcome the gap between the east and
the west of the country, which threatens to rapidly tear Ukraine
apart, by openly exposing the real social contradictionsthe
contrast between the nouveau riche elite and the mass of the population.
This is the last thing the so-called democratic opposition
wants. The Yushchenko camp would be sawing at the branch on which
it sits. Irrespective of all its pompous demagogy, the so-called
Orange revolution has transformed nothing. It has merely replaced
one clique of the propertied elite by another. As Urban correctly
notes, this is the reason it cannot afford to break the monopolies
of the industrial oligarchs.
Yushchenko will be unable to maintain his democratic claims
for long. His collaborator Julia Timoshenko is already loudly
demanding that presidential powers formerly violently opposed
by the opposition should now be retained. The only reason, however,
why Yushchenko needs these powers is to follow the example of
his predecessor Kuchma: the suppression of all opposition.
See Also:
Yushchenko claims victory in Ukraine
presidential election
[28 December 2004]
The power struggle in Ukraine and Americas
strategy for global supremacy
[23 December 2004]
Power struggle in Ukraine: what do Yushchenko
and Yanukovich stand for? [1 December 2004]
Great power rivalries erupt
over disputed election in Ukraine
[25 November 2004]
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