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Ukraine completes its Georgian revolution

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  • Ukraine completes its Georgian revolution

    OneWorld.net, UK
    Jan 21 2005

    Ukraine completes its Georgian revolution
    Misha Kechakmadze

    21 January 2005

    November 2003, Tbilisi, Georgia

    Tens of thousands of people carrying the five cross flags and
    shouting "resign!, resign!" rallied on Freedom Square in downtown
    Tbilisi for three weeks. They demonstrated against the official
    results of the rigged parliamentary election - the last, desperate
    attempt of the widely unpopular regime of Eduard Shevardnadze to stay
    in power. These demonstrations were led by the opposition leader
    Mikheil Saakashvili who, backed by the results of independent exit
    polls, claimed that his party, the United National Movement, won the
    elections. The culmination of these opposition protests came on
    November 23, St. Georgia's Day. 100,000 protesters with red roses in
    their hands seized the parliament building and state chancellery,
    forcing Shevardnadze to step down and paving the way for the
    government of Mikheil Saakashvili, who on January 4, 2004, was
    overwhelmingly elected as the President of Georgia with a mandate to
    implement long-needed social-economical reforms. The new era in
    Georgia started.

    this revolution was an exception down to the particularities of the
    situation in Georgia
    After the Rose Revolution in Georgia, many analysts covering
    political processes in the post-soviet region argued that this
    revolution was an exception down to the particularities of the
    situation in Georgia, and not illustratative of the general picture
    in the post-soviet countries. As evidence, they would mention
    Armenia, Belarus and Azerbaijan, where the authorities managed to
    crack down opposition demonstrations. But in just one year this
    notion proved to be totally wrong when the fire of revolution began
    to flare in Ukraine.

    November-December 2004, Kiev, Ukraine

    Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators, waving orange flags, the
    color of the opposition leader Yushchenko's campaign coalition, and
    shouting "Yushchenko is our President", jammed the Independence
    Square in downtown Kiev for one month. The protests began as the
    outcry of public anger against the suspect official results of the
    second round of voting in the presidential contest between Prime
    Minister Viktor Yanukovych and Viktor Yushchenko. The contest has
    already been marred by the appalling disfigurement of Yushchenko with
    the deadly poison dioxin - an assassination attempt that he hardly
    survived.

    The results announced by the Central Election Commission of Ukraine
    on November 22 claimed that the presidential election was won by the
    Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych. However, citing the results of the
    independent exit polls that gave him an 11% lead over his opponent,
    Yushchenko called his supporters to proclaim his victory. Soon his
    case was backed by international observers who denounced the election
    as rigged. Thousands of people travelled to the capital from across
    Ukraine, even though their journeys were disrupted by government
    closures of major roads and airports. Some of the demonstrators set
    up tents in Kiev's Independence Square. Large Georgians were highly
    visible in these demonstrations in Kiev
    demonstrations were held in many cities elsewhere in Ukraine. It is
    worth mentioning that Georgians were highly visible in these
    demonstrations in Kiev and the flag of Georgia has been among those
    on display in the city's Independence Square, while Yushchenko
    himself held up a rose in an apparent reference to the Rose
    Revolution.

    Meanwhile the governors of Eastern and Southern regions of Ukraine,
    which mostly supported Yanukovych, suggested turning the country into
    a federation with a new autonomous republic of "Southern-Eastern
    Ukraine" with its capital in Kharkiv. With thousands of supporters of
    the two opposing candidates in Kiev, separatists' movement in some
    regions of Ukraine, and Russia's rude intervention into the internal
    affairs of a neighboring state, Ukraine approached the point where
    its very existence came into question. Everybody was fraught with
    uncertainty - what will come next?

    Fortunately for Ukraine, common sense won over insanity. Mediated by
    high-level foreign politicians from Europe, direct talks began
    between Yanukovych and Yushchenko. Though these direct talks did not
    bring a major breakthrough, they contributed to defusing the
    situation. In the meantime, major developments took place in the
    legal field when on December 3 the Ukrainian Supreme Court reached
    the decision to annul the results and order a repeat of the second
    round. Viktor Yushenko and Viktor Yanukovych again faced each other
    in the presidential elections.

    The second vote was re-run on December 26. International observers,
    deployed in thousands for this round, reported a much fairer vote,
    and Viktor Yushchenko won with about 52% of the vote, to Yanukovych's
    44%. Yushchenko was finally declared the winner on January 10, 2005
    after the failure of a legal action brought by Yanukovych. The new
    era in Ukraine started.

    These dramatic processes in Ukraine which were dubbed "the Orange
    people who care for freedom and democracy cannot be intimidated by
    brutal force, oppression, threats and lies
    Revolution" represented one of the finest moments of Ukrainian
    history. Ukraine once again proved that it is an integral part of the
    democratic world. Both Ukrainians and Georgians showed to the world
    that people who care for freedom and democracy cannot be intimidated
    by brutal force, oppression, threats and lies when they defend their
    fundamental right - to vote in fair and democratic elections.

    Political analysts no longer argue about the exclusiveness of
    revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine. They simply ask one question -
    where is next?
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