Hypocrite

Hypocrite

Feb 18, 2010 at 22:10
A few weeks ago, the Kyiv Post predicted that outgoing President Victor Yushchenko’s legacy would be mixed, writing that despite his many shortcomings, “the nation will likely reassess his achievements more favorably in the future.” However, Yushchenko has since – through a series of hideous last presidential actions – provided ample arguments to the contrary, and backs up the nation’s decision to get rid of him.

Yushchenko’s last-ditch attempts to sabotage the presidential bid of erstwhile Orange Revolution ally Yulia Tymoshenko are shameful. It was equally painful to see the man who once symbolized the high hopes of Orange Revolution protesters take hypocrisy to a new high with a last-minute asset grab. This week, he expressed his desire to be rewarded upon retirement by taking ownership over the multi-million-dollar presidential estate that he has resided in for five years.

Asked during his farewell press conference whether he would like to be awarded ownership over the presidential estate located in the posh Koncha-Zaspa suburb of Kyiv, Yushchenko said: “It all depends on the new president. If they say that by law there is such a right, then I’ll accept it.”

In fact, a law giving such a perk at taxpayers’ expense to outgoing presidents and other top state officials does not exist … at least not in the public eye. Nor do such privileges exist in the healthy democracies of Europe and the Americas. But in Ukraine, such practices have become a tradition, yet another way for top politicians and their close friends to rob the country and its people of their riches – even as they are voted out of office.

Why does Yushchenko, who miserably failed his nation, deserve such a reward? Perhaps he should be investigated instead. Such injustices are particularly hard to stomach as the majority of citizens struggle daily to survive. Yushchenko is not exactly impoverished. His family owns a vast estate in Bezradychi in Kyiv Oblast, a 400-meter apartment overlooking Mykhailivsky Cathedral in the heart of the capital and a cabin estate in the Carpathian Mountains.

Looking back, it’s not surprising that Yushchenko has stooped so low. Rather than stop cronies from privatizing state properties, he seems to have helped them. Evidence suggests Yushchenko helped President-elect Victor Yanukovych grab a 120-hectare estate outside of Kyiv, and state dacha takeovers by ex-president Leonid Kuchma and speaker Volodymyr Lytvyn.

Yushchenko had pledged to combat such deals. But now it’s evident he has been taking part all along. This incident symbolizes the greed ingrained in Ukraine’s business and political elite. Most of them are still not interested in serving the national interest. They are interested only in what they can take from this nation.

Web links to Kyiv Post material are allowed provided that they contain a URL hyperlink to the www.kyivpost.com material and a maximum 500-character extract of the story. Otherwise, all materials contained on this site are protected by copyright law and may not be reproduced without the prior written permission of Public Media at news@kyivpost.com

All information of the Interfax-Ukraine news agency placed on this web site is designed for internal use only. Its reproduction or distribution in any form is prohibited without a written permission of Interfax-Ukraine.

Design & Development by MEMO.UA