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  • Ukrainian opposition figure calls for reconciliation between rival

    Ukrainian opposition figure calls for reconciliation between rival supporters

    Ukrayina TV, Donetsk
    29 Dec 04


    Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko's key ally Yuliya
    Tymoshenko has made an unprecedented appearance in a live Q&A session
    on Ukrayina TV, a regional channel based in Prime Minister Viktor
    Yanukovych's home town of Donetsk and owned by his allies. The channel
    has been campaigning hard for Yanukovych and is bitterly critical of
    Yushchenko. Tymoshenko, wearing an orange T-shirt of the local
    football club Shakhtar Donetsk, reiterated throughout the programme
    calls for reconciliation between supporters of rival presidential
    candidates, and sought to refute the anti-Donetsk statements
    attributed to her by her opponents. She defended her own and
    Yushchenko's record in government and opposition and pledged that the
    Yushchenko administration would never discriminate against Donetsk or
    the Russian-speaking regions. Tymoshenko attacked the administration
    of President Leonid Kuchma and voiced her strong opposition to the
    idea of federalizing Ukraine. She said the opposition should be given
    wide powers in order to keep the government in check, and spoke about
    the importance of freedom of speech. The following is an excerpt from
    Tymoshenko's Q&A on 29 December; subheadings inserted editorially:

    [Presenter] Good evening, this is Ukrayina TV live. In the next hour
    and a half, we'll speak with one of the leaders of the orange
    revolution, Yuliya Tymoshenko.

    [Tymoshenko] Good evening.

    [Presenter] We also welcome to our programme Ukrayina TV journalist
    Iryna Markevych.

    [Markevych] Good evening.

    [Presenter] And of course, the main participants in our programme -
    the TV viewers. Thanks to you, this meeting with Yuliya Tymoshenko was
    made possible. We received a huge number of calls and there is much
    interest in this programme, in the meeting with you. We received
    several thousand calls over these two days, not only from Donetsk and
    Luhansk but also from Mykolayiv, Ivano-Frankivsk, Crimea and many
    other cities. Esteemed viewers, you can also call our studio during
    the programme and ask your questions. The number is 312-55-35. Now I
    hand over to Iryna Markevych.

    Denies anti-Donetsk statements

    [Markevych] We do have many letters, but first of all we would like to
    read this letter signed by a whole neighbourhood. [Reads] Yuliya
    Volodymyrivna, before beginning our dialogue, we propose that you
    apologize to the people of Donbass for insults you made at the rally
    in Kiev and during the orange putsch. It is true, there were many
    inappropriate statements at various rallies and in parliament. As a
    proof, here is a video clip.

    [Passage omitted: Video clip of Tymoshenko saying in parliament that
    progovernment MPs can hang themselves on their blue-and-white
    scarves.]

    [Markevych] Mrs Tymoshenko, what can you say to this after the second
    round, are you ready to apologize?

    [Tymoshenko, in Ukrainian] I would like to begin not with this clip
    but with saying that the emotions always run high during the election
    campaign. [Switches into Russian] I think there was much aggression
    on both sides, many things that maybe should not be said by
    politicians even during the election campaign. I would like to begin
    with something different. I will comment on this clip later, no doubt
    about it. But you know, when I was coming here, understanding that in
    general Donetsk is a wonderful city with wonderful people, but because
    of these political tricks it happened so that we are on different
    sides of the barricades. When I was coming here, I was thinking about
    what can unite us in the first moments after this election turmoil. I
    thought you have your favourite football club Shakhtar in Donetsk, and
    I am in Donetsk right now. I don't know any people in Donetsk who are
    not fans of Shakhtar. I remember very well when Shakhtar beat
    Barcelona and people in Kiev's Independence Square were just as happy
    as when parliament made some political decisions. I thought that this
    colour [orange, the colour of Shakhtar shirt and Yushchenko campaign]
    unites us despite everything. Right now I am wearing this Shakhtar
    shirt that I got as a present from a member of your club. It is your
    colour and it is our colour and I want it to stop being the colour of
    confrontation. I want peace. As for those statements, this was
    probably the only harsh statement during the campaign, but you must
    understand that it was addressed to MPs who shouted something
    aggressive at me from their seats. You know, parliament is a big
    family. We, the MPs, are different, but you know sometimes a mother
    can shout at her child and say she would kill him if he does not get
    school on time or kill him if he does not eat breakfast. This does not
    mean the mother is going to kill her child. It is the same with those
    emotions in parliament with orange or blue scarves. It was not
    directed at people in any regions of Ukraine. Sometimes in parliament
    emotions are running high. But they too subside as parliament's
    sessions end.

    [Presenter tries to interrupt]

    [Tymoshenko] Concerning this letter, there are other statements which
    were disseminated before the third round. These statements did not
    belong to me. I want the people who hear me to know that one of the
    worst PR tricks before the third tour was when quotes were put
    together.

    [Presenter, interrupting] I am sorry, we have a caller who wants to
    say something on this topic.

    [Tymoshenko] Please, let me finish. Irochka, you asked a question from
    the people who wrote the letter, and I want to say that these dirty
    quotes were written by certain campaign HQs and they pretended that
    some politicians said it. I want to tell you that there were many
    such quotes. First, that Donetsk and Luhansk should be cordoned off
    with barbed wire. Second, to bring Sevastopol to its knees, drown
    Odessa in the Black Sea and dismantle the "7th kilometre" marketplace
    in Odessa, I can continue with these quotes, but I tell you that I did
    not say any of it. I have a different character, a different attitude
    to people, I could never say this. For those people who wanted me to
    apologize, I want to apologize for everything that I may have said
    that may have offended you. But I never said those phrases.

    [Presenter] Thank you, your apologies are accepted.

    [Passage omitted: Caller says Tymoshenko is not welcome in Donetsk,
    people outside the studio shout, a woman asks Tymoshenko why she is
    afraid of federalism.]

    Against federalism

    [Tymoshenko] Now about federalism. You know, we can talk a lot about
    some historic details. For example, federalism has never developed in
    unitary countries. What is a unitary country? It is a single, united
    country without autonomies. Historically, all the federal states
    evolved from unions of different lands and territories. But Ukraine as
    a unitary state by constitution, a single country, cannot turn the
    process backwards, it would be a new historic practice. Besides, if
    there are some movements to change border and split the country, it
    can be made only though a nationwide referendum. If the people agree,
    then we can split. But it cannot be done through declarations by
    individual political leaders. One more thing, I was born in
    Dnipropetrovsk, I cannot relate to western Ukraine, Lviv and
    Ivano-Frankivsk, the same way as to Dnipropetrovsk. Dnipropetrovsk is
    my native land. But I do not know a single person who can imagine
    Ukraine without Lviv Region, for example or without Donetsk or Kharkiv
    or Luhansk. We would all become deficient if we break up our
    country. Do we really want part of our nation to suffer the way
    [Moldova's breakaway region] Dniester suffers right now.

    [Presenter, interrupting] Mrs Tymoshenko, but Germany has a federal
    structure and it is a democratic country.

    [Tymoshenko] But Germany began as a union of completely different
    territories, and their process was going in the other direction, not
    splitting a single country but uniting. I think it will become even
    more solid. And here, where we have a great single country, what do we
    have to divide? We have nothing to divide. If someone can tell me what
    we have to divide, maybe we can discuss it. A split of the country
    would not benefit anyone. But if a referendum says so, if someone
    holds a referendum on this, if someone living in Ukraine wants to have
    a limited territory of our common home, then of course the
    constitution must be changed.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko argues that pensions and benefits were
    not cut by Yushchenko's government, says people have the right to
    protest.]

    Powers to opposition

    [Markevych] Mrs Tymoshenko, it is apparent that blockades of
    parliament, the presidential administration and the Cabinet of
    Ministers are very effective tactics. Ukraine now needs a law on the
    opposition, it is obvious that there will be tough opposition to your
    authorities. You as a political force, as the leader of your bloc, are
    you ready to support a law that would give opposition the legal right
    to use your radical methods, such as blocking roads and government
    buildings and so on.

    [Presenter] Very effective methods.

    [Tymoshenko] First of all, if people demand something, it must be
    done. We all remember when thousands of coal miners came to Kiev and
    blocked the administration and the cabinet and demanded what was
    rightly theirs. This was a peaceful strike, but strikes happen all
    over the world. I think we need not only a law, but we can do one more
    thing. Taking in account that I have been in opposition for nine
    years, [smiling] I am ready to open a school for young opposition
    activists and lecture there at least twice a week on my experiences of
    being in opposition. It will be peaceful, I don't want opposition in
    Ukraine to be persecuted the way myself and my family and my whole
    team were thrown in jail. When my child was dragged around
    prosecutors' offices.

    [Presenter] This will be another topic for us.

    [Tymoshenko] I not only support the law, I would even support making a
    special amendment to the constitution on opposition in parliament and
    to give opposition the rights that it does not have today - the right
    to keep the authorities in check. Because no-one can keep the
    authorities in check better than the opposition.

    [Presenter] If you come to power, will you let your opposition block
    the Cabinet of Ministers, parliament and your administration?

    [Tymoshenko] I can say that no-one can ban that. I can say firmly that
    if the new authorities work that badly, the people should do what they
    see right, but peacefully - strikes, blockades and rallies are methods
    of open democracy and I will always support them.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko says the tent city in Kiev was organized
    mostly by the people themselves, not by Yushchenko's HQ, denies claims
    that the tent city cost 30m dollars.]

    [Tymoshenko] Prior to making these harsh statements and accusing me,
    you should watch what these authorities will be doing for at least six
    months, who are these people who came to power. No-one knows us,
    no-one knows what we offer.

    Defends own record

    [Presenter, interrupting] Why, people know you very well. You've been
    in power before, you governed the country, they know you well.

    [Tymoshenko] Right, when I governed the country. I want the people to
    hear me, please, don't interrupt me. When I was deputy prime minister
    for only eight months, over these eight months I managed to bring over
    10bn hryvnyas [1.88bn dollars] from the shadow sector of the energy
    complex in Kuchma's entourage into the state budget. The entire fuel
    and energy complex was reconstructed.

    [Markevych, interrupting] At the same time, people had no heating in
    their homes, right at that time.

    [Tymoshenko] Excuse me, before I took office, the people had neither
    heating nor electricity. When I left office, every light bulb was
    working in the country and every radiator was warm, and there were no
    blackouts when I left the government. I left the government not
    because I did something bad but because Kuchma's entourage lost tens
    of billions of hryvnyas. And Kuchma, instead of saying at least one
    word of thanks for this work, he caved in to his entourage and threw
    me straight from the deputy prime minister's chair to jail, because I
    did what the people expected. These persecution that I have been
    experiencing for eight years only because I do not want this country
    to look the way it does today, believe me, I am not fighting so that
    you can say a kind word to me, but because I know what is happening in
    politics. I know that today the authorities and business joined in one
    ugly conglomerate, and they must be separated. Most of the TV channels
    today - Inter, ICTV and One Plus One, who did not speak the truth
    before the revolution, the channels belonging to clans in Kuchma's
    entourage, they created this image of criminals and bandits from the
    people who can help you. I wanted business, if I wanted to preserve
    something I had before 1996, believe me, it is very easy to cut a deal
    with Kuchma. But I did not do it because...

    [Markevych, interrupting] Mrs Tymoshenko, our programme is supposed to
    be dialogue, you are avoiding an answer.

    [Tymoshenko] May I finish?

    [Markevych] May I ask a question?

    [Tymoshenko] In 30 seconds I will finish with this topic. I want to
    say that I didn't want to cut any deals because I see a way to make
    change Ukraine, to change your life, and I want you to see it. Do not
    jump to conclusions and do not rush with confrontations and insults.

    Media freedom important

    [Presenter] Thank you for your answer, we now have the K-61 [regional]
    studio on the line. Please, K-61, you're live.

    [Studio presenter] We are on air and we continue asking questions,
    please.

    [Journalist] Good evening, Mrs Tymoshenko, my name is Andriy
    Tyutyunnikov, I am a journalist at the Donetskiye Novosti newspaper. I
    have the following question. You have talked about politics on
    national channels and information wars and made-up quotes. Mr Tomenko
    [opposition MP and head of parliamentary committee for freedom of
    speech] said he would take to courts those media who provided what he
    said was incorrect information. Does it mean introduction of
    censorship? Thank you.

    [Tymoshenko] Censorship is out of the question. Regardless of who the
    owner is, TV stations must simply tell the truth. This will be one of
    the first reforms that we want to implement. I am thankful to the
    Ukrayina TV for this opportunity. I know this is a hard programme for
    everyone, but thank you for doing this and thanks to the owners of
    your channel who also provided this opportunity. No matter how hard
    this programme is, I think this will be the first step in eliminating
    this massive confrontation which had been created artificially.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko presents a heart-shaped toy to presenters
    as a sign of good will.]

    Attacks Kuchma administration

    [Caller] Good evening, this is Mariupol, my name is Lidiya. Mrs
    Tymoshenko, I want to ask you personally three question.

    [Markevych] Let's pick only one of those, the most important one,
    please.

    [Caller] If I could, two questions please. Your actions run counter to
    basic civil norms. Mrs Tymoshenko, your team of bandits headed by
    impostor Yushchenko has shamelessly stolen the legitimacy of our
    President Viktor Yanukovych. You counted on his decency, you are
    getting away with it. All the secrets come out eventually.

    [Markevych] Thank you, we understand your question.

    [Caller] The second question, I want to ask about Lazarenko [fugitive
    former prime minister accused of money laundering]. You, Yushchenko
    and Lazarenko siphoned our hard-earned money to Cyprus. Your photos
    appeared in newspapers on Cyprus with Armenian mafia. Explain please,
    what were the circumstances while you present it so cleverly.

    [Markevych] Thank you. Very emotional statement.

    [Tymoshenko] First of all, everything concerning Interpol. Every
    person who has access to the internet go to the Interpol web site and
    see that I have never been on any wanted lists. This information is
    absolutely false. If I were on a wanted list, we would have to hold
    this meeting at some secret hideout and I would wear a long trench
    coat, dark glasses and a moustache to make sure no-one recognizes
    me. I am not hiding, I am in the streets and on TV. I can say I have
    never hidden from anyone and never put my head down. As for Lazarenko,
    he was appointed by Kuchma, by the way. In 1997, when I was the first
    of all MPs to raise the question in parliament of Kuchma's
    impeachment, after this all my troubles began. Kuchma's entire team
    was trying to erase me from the face of the Earth. You listen to this
    information, a political does not need to be killed by a bullet or by
    poison, he can be killed by dirty information. A politician who can
    help you disappears from your life. As for Lazarenko, not one but tens
    of Ukrainian courts closed all the cases against me, my family and my
    team. The courts ruled that I never committed any crimes. The same
    thing happened in the USA. About 99 per cent of charges against
    Lazarenko have been dropped. I am not a judge, I cannot say whether he
    did good or bad but I know that all the courts said I had nothing in
    common with this man and that I never committed any crimes. What you
    heard about me was a campaign against a politician who prevented
    Kuchma from fully opening his wings over the territory of Ukraine and
    did not let him feel like he owns this Ukraine Ltd. I think time will
    prove me right.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko takes a question, reiterates that people
    can protest peacefully, block presidential administration, reiterates
    that media distorted her and Yushchenko's image.]

    No discrimination against Russian-speakers

    I was born in Dnipropetrovsk. So speaking of barricades, I am on the
    eastern side. I have lived there all my adult life. I learned to speak
    Ukrainian only when I came to the government in 1999. My mother and my
    whole family live in Dnipropetrovsk. Believe me, we continue speaking
    Russian in our family. I will never take any steps to degrade even
    slightly the language that my family uses. The same applies to the
    families who speak Ukrainian. One more thing. If you remember, Kuchma
    ran in two elections with the motto of making Russian an official
    language. And he never did. For two years Viktor Yanukovych was prime
    minister but he did not raise this question and did not pass this law
    with Kuchma. They did not need it, they were not in the opposition,
    they didn't need to promise, they should have acted. I would like the
    people to have open eyes on both sides, be more objective. I know for
    sure that if we raise this curtain of propaganda, we shall see many
    things as they really are. No matter how hard out relations develop, I
    know that the government in which I may work will do even impossible
    things for Donetsk, Luhansk, Dnipropetrovsk and every region in our
    country. Everyone will feel it.

    [Presenter] Thank you very much.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko reiterates her points on united nation,
    media freedom]

    [Presenter] Mrs Tymoshenko, there has been a lot of interest in the
    foreign media in the election in Ukraine, the three rounds of
    elections. About 2,000 foreign correspondents worked in Ukraine, and
    many of them worked in Donetsk. They came to our office, asked
    questions, talked to us. And a BBC correspondent, Jonathan Charles,
    came to our office and shared his impressions and opinions about the
    events in Ukraine. Let us listen to what he said.

    [Jonathan Charles, in English, overlaid with Russian translation,
    translated from Russian] In my view, the situation now is this:
    Ukraine has to some extent found itself between a rock and a hard
    place, from the point of view of relations between Russia and Western
    Europe, which are rather complicated at the moment. And Ukraine is now
    like a football. Through Ukraine, the West is trying to tell Russia,
    you shouldn't really think that you will always have your way, there
    are some limits, and we will keep you within those limits. So Ukraine
    is a ball in this game. I have had time to formulate my point of view,
    because I have spent long enough in Ukraine. We have travelled a lot,
    and visited different places. The understanding there was from the
    very beginning in the West, that there was a revolution in Ukraine,
    now I think it was mistaken. The thing is, a revolution is when the
    entire people rise up against the government. This is not the
    situation in Ukraine. Ukraine as a country is clearly divided. There
    are people who support Yanukovych, and there are people who support
    Yushchenko. For a country this is not very good, of course. It is a
    difficult time for Ukraine, but my personal impression is that most of
    the ordinary people we talked to do actually want Ukraine to remain
    united.

    [Presenter] Jonathan has confirmed some of the points we have
    discussed with you. What is your comment on the interview?

    [Tymoshenko] First, I am one of those Ukrainians who want Ukraine to
    stay united, whatever the circumstances. And Jonathan said the same,
    by the way. He said most people want it. Second, I do not want Ukraine
    to become an object of kicking on the geopolitical arena. Neither
    America, nor Europe or Russia should pursue their own interests on our
    territory through some special political projects. I want Ukraine to
    become a fully-fledged player on the international arena. I want
    Ukraine to turn into a player, a country that has an influence and
    which stands up for its interests.

    [Passage omitted: Tymoshenko says her faction and most of the
    Yushchenko faction voted against troop deployment to Iraq, whereas the
    pro-Kuchma and pro-Yanukovych factions backed the move; reiterates her
    points against censorship, accepts flowers from the station's
    director.]
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