Ocnus.Net
Pinchuk’s Party
By Editorial , Kyiv Post 16/7/08
Jul 17, 2008 - 7:43:41 AM
The two-page photo spread from Yalta in this week’s ‘Sobitiya’ magazine
was nauseating enough. The saccharine images in this sister publication
of Victor Pinchuk’s Fakty newspaper group show Pinchuk cutting an
oversized cake with his wife, Olena Franchuk; of Franchuk sitting with
her father, the foul-mouthed former president, Leonid Kuchma; of
Franchuk being chatted up by U.S. Ambassador William Taylor.
More disturbing about the Livadia gathering are the destructive
fantasies of these reputed leaders. Regrettably, their delusions are
infecting more people, in Ukraine and abroad. The ostensible aim of
Pinchuk’s 5th annual Yalta European Summit (YES) is to bring Ukraine
closer to joining the European Union by inviting foreign dignitaries to
mix with hundreds of flown-in journalists and other guests. Sadly, many
of the journalists — still lacking professionalism and respectable
expense accounts — allow themselves to be wined and dined at the host’s
expense.
It’s not going to work, guys. Do you want to bring Ukraine closer to
the European Union? Then stop pretending that Ukraine is a normal
democracy. Start solving all Ukraine’s great unsolved crimes.
Were the events exposed on the Melnychenko tapes true? Who poisoned
Yushchenko? Who ordered Gongadze’s murder? Give us a full accounting of
how the greasy oligarchs acquired their wealth in the slimy
privatizations. We don’t have space to air the whole dirty laundry
list. We’re not talking about historical irrelevancies. We’re talking
about skeletons in the closet and corpses in the basement that will
haunt this nation until they are exhumed and exposed.
There’s no use in looking to members of the entrenched elite to lead
Ukraine closer to European integration. Businessman Pinchuk is not
going to push for any investigation that cuts close to home, especially
of father-in-law Kuchma.
Ukraine’s power structure is like a bad restaurant whose owners refuse
to get a new chef or change the menu. Same old faces, same old garbage.
Those in power want us to forget about the sins of the 1990s and
sleepwalk through the rest of this decade.
Too many of us are obliging, buying into the storyline of powerbrokers
in a no-holds-barred war with each other. While many conflicts are
real, when it comes to extracting justice from the top, they all seem
to play rehearsed roles in a fake wrestling match designed to make sure
no one gets hurt.
So what’s the answer?
For journalists and foreigners, if you do attend, pay your own way. And
start asking harder questions, rather than being razzled and dazzled by
the wine and jazz.
For weary Ukrainians, stop nursing wounds over the failed promises of
the four-year-old Orange Revolution. Checking out of politics is never
a good idea. The nation isn’t the Hotel California. Too much is at
stake.
It’s time for Ukrainians to search for and find leaders who keep
promises.
Source: Ocnus.net 2008