Kyiv Post News, Opinion

The president's South Korean visit: no sanctions, no isolation President Viktor Yanukovych's visit to South Korea was highly productive, and once again proved that that Ukraine's top officials face neither sanctions, no isolation in the world.
Mar 30 at 12:28 | Viacheslav Pikhovshek
Dizzying spin One should not be under the delusion that President Viktor Yanukovych is being welcomed into the international community.
Mar 30 at 00:15 | Kyiv Post
Should Ukraine reinstate death penalty for murder?

Mar 29 at 23:51 | Alyona Zhuk and Olga Rudenko
Oksana Makar This nation's all-too-prevalent culture of violent misogyny and impunity for the elite is what really killed Oksana Makar.
Mar 29 at 23:36 | Kyiv Post
What John Demjanjuk could have taught us Stephen Paskey writes: The Demjanjuk case shows the law's limits.
Mar 29 at 23:13 | Stephen Paskey
Vox populi with Brian Bonner: Was it a good idea for Obama to meet with Yanukovych in Seoul? Do you think it was a good idea for U.S. President Barack Obama to meet privately with Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych at the Nuclear Security Summit in Seoul, South Korea, on March 27, especially in light of the West’s criticism of Yanukovych for persecuting his political opponents? We asked guests at a U.S.-Ukraine Business Council forum in Kyiv on March 28.
Mar 29 at 22:46 | Brian Bonner
All power to 'The Family' Two years have passed since Viktor Yanukovych was inaugurated as president. Since then Ukraine has changed greatly. After hardly any legislation being adopted during five orange years, the country has seen febrile legislative activity. The number of government changes has also been large.
Mar 27 at 13:36 | Anders Aslund
Despite pressure, Ukraine manages to stand up for its interests The long saga of Ukraine’s ups and downs in joining a free-trade zone with other former Soviet republics seems to be coming to an end. President Viktor Yanukovych is closer than ever to fulfilling his foreign political goal of opening up trade within the region, also known as the Commonwealth of Independent States.
Mar 27 at 13:27 | Viacheslav Pikhovshek
Is dinner ever really free when you are Ukrainian? Every time you go to a foreign country you understand pretty well how other people perceive your native land. As a result, they treat you according to this perception and as a stereotype from the place you came from. Maybe I will sound a little bit anti-patriotic, but as you probably noticed Ukraine is not the best country to live in. It has a lot of peculiarities that form a stereotype of my country which in most cases is pretty close to reality.
Mar 27 at 09:51 | Alina Likholat
Gryshchenko carries on in best tradition of Soviet foreign ministers Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Kostyantyn Gryshchenko’s recent response to the opinion article of five European Union foreign ministers was a paradigm reminiscent of Soviet diplomacy, led from 1957 to 1985 by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. Granted, it was amusing because it was so egregious. After all Gryshchenko is a copycat of Russia’s foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and they are alumni of the same school.
Mar 26 at 12:20 | Askold S. Lozynskyj
World Affairs Journal: Ukraine is the Yanukovych family's business Just when did people start referring to the inner circle around President Viktor Yanukovych as “The Family”? The term is now commonplace, but my impression is that it started entering the political vocabulary of Ukraine about six to twelve months ago, when son Oleksandr joined [3] Viktor Senior and Viktor Junior to form a triumvirate of power holders and all three began promoting their buddies to positions of authority in the government or to positions of unbounded rapaciousness in the economy.
Mar 26 at 09:44 | Alexander J. Motyl
What John Demjanjuk could have told us On March 17, John Demjanjuk died in a German nursing home. Demjanjuk spent 35 years of his life fighting charges that he served as a Nazi guard. In 2009, he was convicted in Germany as an accomplice to the murder of 27,900 Jews at the Sobibor extermination camp in occupied Poland.
Mar 23 at 17:21 | Stephen Paskey
Something to hide Ukraine's Constitutional Court this week ruled to let lawmakers conveniently hide their expenditures and that of their families from public scrutiny.
Mar 22 at 23:40 | Kyiv Post
Silence kills the lambs Katya Gorchinskaya writes: Ukraine tax police feels it is not accountable to anyone.
Mar 22 at 22:50 | Katya Gorchinskaya
Vox populi with Daryna Shevchenko: What is the right punishment for the men who tried to kill Oksana Makar? What punishment is fitting for the three men who on March 8 allegedly gang raped and attempted to burn to death Oksana Makar, an 18-year-old Mykolayiv woman?
Mar 22 at 22:12 | Daryna Shevchenko